Pushing the Limits: Engineering Advanced RF Interconnects to Meet the Challenges of Hypersonic Missile Development

24AERP05_05

05/01/2024

Abstract
Content

The development of hypersonic missiles represents the most significant advancement of defense weaponry since the 1960s. However, they also pose unique challenges for both design and technology. The term “hypersonic” refers to any speed faster than five times the speed of sound, or above Mach 5. Modern hypersonic missile systems require extensive communications interconnects within a highly confined space. This space requirement creates a demand for solutions combining small form factor with reduced weight and rugged construction to withstand high vibration and impact conditions from deployment to target.

Currently there are two types of hypersonic weapons. Hypersonic glide vehicles (HGVs), also known as boost-glide vehicles, typically launch from ballistic missiles and are released at a specific altitude, speed, and with the flight path tailored to a target without being powered. Hypersonic cruise missiles (HCMs) are powered all the way to their targets, flying at lower altitudes than HGVs and launched from rockets or jet aircraft. Power for HCMs comes from air-breathing scramjet engines, which have been in development since the 1950s and most successful since the 2000s.

Meta TagsDetails
Pages
4
Citation
"Pushing the Limits: Engineering Advanced RF Interconnects to Meet the Challenges of Hypersonic Missile Development," Mobility Engineering, May 1, 2024.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
May 01
Product Code
24AERP05_05
Content Type
Magazine Article
Language
English