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The Physics and Hype of Hypersonic Weapons
#1
In a televised address to Russia’s Federal Assembly in 2018, President Vladimir Putin announced an escalation of the ongoing arms race with the U.S., which had withdrawn from the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty in 2002. Having rejected the decades-long arms-control agreement, the U.S. had developed and begun building a network of defenses to intercept long-range ballistic missiles, threatening Russia’s ability to deter attacks on its homeland. He had warned Americans that Russia would be forced to respond to these deployments, Putin told his audience, but they had refused to listen. “So listen now!”

Among other systems, Russia was developing new hypersonic weapons, Putin declared: missiles that fly long distances through the atmosphere at more than five times the speed of sound, or faster than Mach 5. (Mach 1 is the local speed of sound. Speeds between Mach 1 and Mach 5 are supersonic, whereas those exceeding Mach 5 are hypersonic.) According to him, one of these, called Avangard, was a highly maneuverable missile that could glide thousands of kilometers with an initial speed greater than Mach 20, making it “absolutely invulnerable to any air or missile defense system.”

Putin’s announcement, accompanied by intimidating simulations of the new weapons snaking across the globe at unbelievable speeds, added fuel to a dangerous new arms race. The weapons involved in this competition are touted not only for their speed but also for their stealth and maneuverability. Intercontinental ballistic missiles, which follow an elliptical path into space before plunging down toward their target, reach speeds above Mach 20, but they have predictable trajectories for most of their flight and typically can maneuver only briefly, after they reenter the atmosphere. In contrast, hypersonic weapons would fly deep within the atmosphere most of the time, using lift generated by airflow to weave around and try to evade interceptors. Approaching at such low altitudes, these weapons would avoid detection by ground-based radar systems until close to their target, making them more difficult to stop.

In an assessment after Putin’s speech, U.S. military officials stated that hypersonic weapons, which China was also developing, would “revolutionize warfare.” The Pentagon, which had been working on similar systems for a decade and a half, ramped up its own efforts; last year Congress dedicated $3.2 billion to the research and development of hypersonic weapons and defenses. Russia and China now claim to each have deployed at least one such system. The U.S. has six known hypersonic programs, divided among the air force, army and navy. Proponents say that these weapons are incredibly fast and agile and virtually invisible.

We disagree. We belong to a small but vibrant community of physicists and engineers scattered around the globe who study new weapons systems to understand their potential impacts on global security. This tradition is deep, going back to participants in the Manhattan Project and Russian scientists such as Andrei Sakharov, who sought to mitigate the danger to the world from the nuclear weapons they had helped create. As investigative physicists, we glean what information we can about new and usually secretive technologies, analyze it and share our evaluations with the public.

Our studies indicate that hypersonic weapons may have advantages in certain scenarios, but by no means do they constitute a revolution. Many of the claims about them are exaggerated or simply false. And yet the widespread perception that hypersonic weapons are a game-changer has increased tensions among the U.S., Russia and China, driving a new arms race and escalating the chances of conflict.

https://www.scientificamerican.com/artic...c-weapons/
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#2
don't forget one was shot down by a Patriot battery...the latter literally 1980s technology.
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#3
I'm going to stay out of specific discussions on this, but I will say that anybody who was surprised at Russian military tech performance falling far short of its marketing has not been paying much attention lately (or not at all lately, for that matter).
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#4
‘ Russia’s most potent hypersonic weapon neutralised, says Ukraine ‘

https://news.google.com/articles/CBMiamh...l?hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US%3Aen
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#5
Bill in NC wrote:
don't forget one was shot down by a Patriot battery...the latter literally 1980s technology.

Per today's news, Ukraine (claims to have) shot down 4 more.

Also, the Patriot has been upgraded a number of times since the 80s.
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#6
of course, Russia and China are going to overhype their weapons, and of course, our military is going to overhype those weapons as well. That is how our military will get even more money to spend forcing Russia and China to spend more as well.
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#7
Ombligo wrote:
of course, Russia and China are going to overhype their weapons, and of course, our military is going to overhype those weapons as well. That is how our military will get even more money to spend forcing Russia and China to spend more as well.

Its the CIRRRRRCLE, the CIRRRCLE OF HYYYYPE
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#8
Bill in NC wrote:
don't forget one was shot down by a Patriot battery...the latter literally 1980s technology.

Was it luck?
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#9
macphanatic wrote:
[quote=Bill in NC]
don't forget one was shot down by a Patriot battery...the latter literally 1980s technology.

Was it luck?
No... it was really crappy Russian technology painted up like a 21st century weapon....
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#10
A US-made Patriot air defense system was likely damaged, but not destroyed, as the result of a Russian missile barrage in and around Kyiv early Tuesday morning local time, a US official tells CNN.

They emptied the entire battery of missiles. 32 missiles at drones.

per Telegram below

Americans themselves suggested the tactics of battle: How the Russian "Kinzhal”(Dagger) managed to outwit Patriot

On the night of May 16 the Patriot air defense system, which was presented to Ukraine this year by the U.S. to a great sold-out crowd, worked over Kiev. And which, as the Americans advertise it, is practically all-powerful and invincible. And the Russian Defense Ministry said in the morning that the Patriot was hit by a single Kinzhal missile. Viktor Baranets, a military columnist for KP, told us how it happened:

The main target of the strike was the US Patriot surface-to-air missile system itself. As well as some military-industrial facilities, ammunition depots and fuel bases. By the way, the tactics were "suggested" to us by the Americans themselves. Our "Geranium" drones were ahead of the targets. They were detected by American radars, and thus gave away their positions. They were followed by anti-radar missiles, which destroyed the enemy's radars. And after that, Kalibras and Dagger missiles flew at the already blind Patriot and other targets. We took out one Patriot battery completely. Three more are on the way.

choose the Spin you want
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