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Hypersonic weapon
High-speed missiles and projectiles From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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A hypersonic weapon is a weapon that can travel and maneuver significantly during atmospheric flight at hypersonic speed, which is defined as above Mach 5 (five times the speed of sound).[1] These typically fall into two main categories: hypersonic glide vehicles (boost-glide weapons), and hypersonic cruise missiles (airbreathing weapons).[2]


Below Mach 1, weapons would be characterized as subsonic, and above Mach 1, as supersonic. At extremely high speeds, air in the shock wave is ionized into a plasma, which makes control and communication difficult.[3]
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Categorization
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There are two main categories of hypersonic weapon:
- Boost-glide hypersonic weapons, which glide and maneuver at hypersonic speeds following boosting by rocket propulsion. Typical examples are ballistic missiles fitted with hypersonic glide vehicle warheads.[4][1]
- Airbreathing hypersonic weapons, typically hypersonic cruise missiles which maintain hypersonic speed by engines such as scramjets.[4][1]
Gun-launched weapons, projectiles fired from either a conventional artillery or prospective railguns may also be considered a type of hypersonic weapon, though they are less common than the two main types.[1]
Existing weapon systems such as ballistic missiles already travel at hypersonic speeds (and may actually reach their target sooner when on depressed trajectories)[5] but are not typically classified as hypersonic weapons due to lacking the use of aerodynamic lift to allow their reentry vehicles to maneuver under guided flight within the atmosphere.[6][7] Maneuverable reentry vehicles, such as employed on the Pershing II, Fattah-1 and DF-21D, are generally excluded from this definition as they maneuver aerodynamically only for short periods of time during the terminal phase, and lack the significant cross-range maneuverability expected from hypersonic weapons.[2] Additionally, air-to-air missiles can temporarily reach hypersonic speeds in certain atmospheric envelopes and launch regimes, but generally are not considered as hypersonic weapons as they do not conduct significant maneuver at these speeds nor have the ability to evade anti-missile defenses.[8][6][2]
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History
The Silbervogel was the first design for a hypersonic weapon and was developed by German scientists in the 1930s, but was never constructed.[9]
The ASALM (Advanced Strategic Air-Launched Missile) was a medium-range strategic missile program developed in the late 1970s for the United States Air Force; the missile's development reached the stage of propulsion-system testing, test-flown to Mach 5.5[10] before being cancelled in 1980.
In the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Russia was seen to have fielded operational weapons and used them for combat. The Kremlin presents new hypersonic weapons as supposedly capable of overcoming "any" foreign missile defense systems, with the "pre-nuclear deterrence" concept contained in its 2014 iteration of the official Russian Military Doctrine.[11] A volley of Russian hypersonic missiles were launched at Kyiv in January 2023.[12]
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Hypersonic weapon examples
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See also Hypersonic weapons
Selected examples of hypersonic weapons programs:
China
- DF-17/DF-ZF - hypersonic glide vehicle / ballistic missile
- DF-27 - hypersonic glide vehicle / ballistic missile
- DF-21 - hypersonic glide vehicle / ballistic missile
- YJ-17 - hypersonic boost-glide waverider / ballistic missile
- YJ-19 - hypersonic scramjet cruise missile
- CJ-1000 - hypersonic scramjet cruise missile
France
- VERAS hypersonic glide vehicle (first French program on hypersonics; launched in 1965 and cancelled in 1971)[13][14]
- ASN4G hypersonic air-launched cruise missile (under development; technological work on the missile began in the early 1990s and scheduled to succeed the ASMP in the pre-strategic deterrence role in 2035)[15][16]
- VMaX (Véhicule Manœuvrant Expérimental) and VMaX-2 hypersonic glide vehicles (first flight test took place on June 26, 2023, from the DGA's site in Biscarrosse and was successful)[17][18][19][20][21][22][15][16]
India

Japan
- Hyper Velocity Gliding Projectile
- Hypersonic Cruise Missile (HCM)[27]
North Korea
- Hwasong-8 - HGV
- Hwasong-11E - HGV
- Hwasong-12B (unconfirmed) - HGV
- Hwasong-16B - HGV
Russia
- 3M22 Zircon[28] - hypersonic scramjet cruise missile
- Avangard (hypersonic glide vehicle)[29]
United States

- DARPA Hypersonic Air-breathing Weapon Concept (HAWC)[30] hypersonic scramjet cruise missile
- Hypersonic Attack Cruise Missile (Air Force) in partnership with Australia[31][32][33]
- Long-Range Hypersonic Weapon (Army) and Conventional Prompt Strike (Navy) boost-glide system, both use the same Common-Hypersonic Glide Body HGV[34]
- OpFires (DARPA)[35][36] - hypersonic glide vehicle using body from AGM-183 ARRW
- Lockheed Martin Mako[37] (unknown flight profile)
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References
Further reading
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