Odisha: Homegrown supersonic interceptor missile test-fired

This is the second time that the missile has been test-fired in less than a month.

Update: 2017-03-01 07:49 GMT
The White House said on Monday it is studying the details of an Iranian ballistic missile test. (Photo: Representational Image/AP)

Bhubaneshwar: Proving its prowess in developing self-defence missile technology, India on Wednesday successfully test-fired an indigenously developed supersonic interceptor missile capable of destroying any incoming enemy ballistic missile at a low altitude.

The interceptor was flight-tested by Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) from the Abdul Kalam Island (Wheeler Island) off Odisha coast in the presence of senior scientists and officials of the Strategic Forces Command.

This is the second time that the missile was test-fired in less than a month and is part of an effort to put in place a multi-layer missile defence system.

“Today’s test launch was conducted in order to validate various parameters of the interceptor in flight mode,” a defence official said.

 Sources in the DRDO said the interceptor was engaged against a target which was a Prithvi missile launched from Launch Complex 3 of the Integrated Test Range (ITR) at Chandipur near here, taking up the trajectory of a hostile ballistic missile.

The target missile was launched at about 10:10 am hours from Chandipur.

After about four minutes the interceptor, Advanced Air Defence (AAD) missile positioned at Abdul Kalam Island in the Bay of Bengal, getting signals from tracking radars, - roared through its trajectory to destroy the incoming hostile missile in mid-air, in an endo-atmospheric altitude, the official said.

“The mission was excellent and it was a direct hit,” said a scientist of the Defence Research Development Organisation (DRDO).

The interceptor is a 7.5-meter long single stage solid rocket propelled guided missile equipped with a navigation system, a hi-tech computer and an electro-mechanical activator, the official said.

The interceptor missile had its own mobile launcher, secure data link for interception, independent tracking and homing capabilities and sophisticated radars, the official added.

On February 11, an incoming hostile ballistic missile target was successfully intercepted at high altitude, above 50 km of the earth’s atmosphere by an exo-atmospheric interceptor missile off the Odisha coast.

Earlier, a low altitude (endo-atmospheric) test of AAD missile was successfully test launched on May 15, 2016 from the same base.

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