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AGM-88 HARM Anti-Radiation Missile
Technical Summary
Primary Function: Air-to-surface anti-radiation missile; attack and destroy hostile radar installations.
Contractor: Raytheon Corporation (originally developed by Texas Instruments)
Power Plant: Thiokol dual-thrust, solid-propellant rocket engine
Length: 4.1m (13 ft 8 in)
Launch Weight: 360 kg (800 lb)
Diameter: 254 mm (10 in)
Wing Span: 1.1 m (3 ft 8 in)
Range: 90+ km (80+ statute miles, 57+ nautical miles)
Speed: 340 m/s (760+ mph)
Guidance: radar homing
Warhead: Blast fragmentation; warhead weight 68 kg (150 lb)
Unit Cost: US$284,000
Date Deployed: 1985

The AGM-88 High speed Anti Radiation Missile (HARM) is an air-to-surface tactical missile designed to seek out and destroy enemy radar-equipped air defense systems. The missile was originally developed by Texas Instruments as a replacement for the AGM-78 Standard ARM system. Production was later taken over by Raytheon Corporation.

The AGM-88 can detect, attack and destroy a target with minimal aircrew input. The proportional guidance system that homes in on enemy radar emissions has a fixed antenna and seeker head in the missile's nose. A smokeless, solid-propellant, dual-thrust rocket motor propels the missile at speeds up to Mach 2.

The HARM missile was approved for full production in March 1983. It proved effective against Libyan targets in the Gulf of Sidra in 1986, and was used extensively by the United States Navy and the United States Air Force for Operation Desert Storm during the Gulf War of 1991.

"Magnum" is spoken over the radio to announce the launch of a AGM-88.*

See also


External links


Anti-radiation missiles of the United States | Anti-radiation missiles of Germany | Cold War anti-radiation missiles | Modern American weapons | Raytheon products

AGM-88 HARM | AGM-88 הארם | AGM-88 HARM

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "AGM-88 HARM".

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