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Encyclopedia > Ballistic missiles
Polish missile wz. 8/K-14 (Scud-B)

A ballistic missile is a missile, usually with no wings or fins, with a prescribed course that cannot be altered after the missile has burned its fuel, whereafter its course is governed by the laws of ballistics. In order to cover large distances ballistic missiles must be launched very high into the air or in space, in a sub_orbital spaceflight; for intercontinental missiles the altitude halfway is ca. 1200 km. When in space and no more thrust is provided, the missiles are freefalling.


Long and medium range ballistic missiles are generally designed to deliver nuclear warheads because their payload is too limited for conventionally_armed ballistic missiles to be efficient, and because the extreme heat of re_entry would damage chemical or biological payloads.


Many advanced ballistic missiles have several rocket stages and their course can be slightly adjusted from one stage to the next.


Ballistic missiles can vary widely in range and use, and are often divided into categories based on range.


The US distinguishes:

Medium to short range missiles are often called theatre ballistic missiles (TBM).


Using a missile with a considerably longer range than the distance from launch site to target can make sense: it can reach a higher altitude and come down with a higher speed, making defense more difficult. E.g. a missile with a range 3000 km fired at a target that is only 500 km away could arrive at its target after having reached an altitude of about 1200 km _ roughly the height reached by ICBMs. Like them, it would arrive at a speed of typically more than 6 km/s.


The first ballistic missile was the V-2 rocket, developed by Nazi Germany in the 1940s, which was successully launched for the first time on October 3, 1942 and used for the first time in operation on September 8, 1944.


Specific types of ballistic missiles include:

launched from fixed sites, mobile launchers and submarines.


Specific types of ballistic missile submarines include:

See also: Anti-ballistic missile, Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, nuclear disarmament, nuclear warfare, submarine, Submarine launched ballistic missile.


External link




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