The AGM-88 High-speed Anti-Radiation Missile (HARM) is a tactical, air-to-surface missile designed to home in on electronic transmissions coming from surface-to-air radar systems. It was originally developed by Texas Instruments as a replacement for the AGM-45 Shrike and AGM-78 Standard ARM system. Production was later taken over by Raytheon Corporation when it purchased the defense production business of Texas Instruments.
Attributes | Values |
---|
rdf:type
| |
rdfs:label
| |
rdfs:comment
| - The AGM-88 High-speed Anti-Radiation Missile (HARM) is a tactical, air-to-surface missile designed to home in on electronic transmissions coming from surface-to-air radar systems. It was originally developed by Texas Instruments as a replacement for the AGM-45 Shrike and AGM-78 Standard ARM system. Production was later taken over by Raytheon Corporation when it purchased the defense production business of Texas Instruments.
|
sameAs
| |
dcterms:subject
| |
dbkwik:military/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
detonation
| - FMU-111/B laser proximity fuze
|
Origin
| |
filling
| - WDU-21/B blast-fragmentation in a WAU-7/B warhead section, and later WDU-37/B blast-fragmentation warhead.
|
Guidance
| - Passive radar homing with home-on-jam,GPS/INS and EHF active radar homing in E variant. 500-20,000 MHz for AGM-88C
|
Service
| |
Name
| |
Type
| |
Caption
| - An AGM-88 HARM missile loaded aboard an F/A-18C
|
is missile
| |
Unit Cost
| - 284000(xsd:integer)
- US$870,000 for AGM-88E
|
Wars
| |
Manufacturer
| - Texas Instruments, then Raytheon Corporation
|
launch platform
| - F/A-18, F-4G, F-16, Tornado IDS, F-35 and others
|
Used by
| |
propellant
| |
Engine
| - Thiokol SR113-TC-1 dual-thrust rocket engine
|
production date
| |
design date
| |
Designer
| |
abstract
| - The AGM-88 High-speed Anti-Radiation Missile (HARM) is a tactical, air-to-surface missile designed to home in on electronic transmissions coming from surface-to-air radar systems. It was originally developed by Texas Instruments as a replacement for the AGM-45 Shrike and AGM-78 Standard ARM system. Production was later taken over by Raytheon Corporation when it purchased the defense production business of Texas Instruments.
|