You guys tossed the initials INS around as if you know what you are talking about. You do not.
Inertial guidance or INS is essentially dead reckoning. Or a guess.
Ok pls tell how can the missile find the target? How can the missile even know if it is heading to a correct direction let’s say Miami or Wuhan?
The question is technically correct. A ballistic missile using only INS (dead reckoning) do not and cannot 'find' anything. To 'find' something begs the question of sensor(s) in the first place. Even a blind man using a cane is more capable than an INS at finding something because the cane produces external based feedback when it encounters something.
If the target is fixed and if the guessing mechanism is sophisticated enough, then the INS will guide the missile to the intended location. But geographical location is not necessarily the same as the target. The target could be stationary
ATOP a geographical point and moves when convenient. In this case, if the target moved then the ballistic missile using only INS guidance will hit the ground where it estimated it should be.
Inertial navigation is
NOT sensor.
Not true.
What you said is not true, not because of the accelerometer's dynamic range, but because of
AERODYNAMICS on the body.
https://history.nasa.gov/SP-60/ch-5.html
https://history.nasa.gov/SP-367/chapt7.htm
The bottom line, which came from NASA, is that with hypersonic flight, aerodynamic forces on the body produces greater effects in smaller amount of time than in subsonic flight. Thirty minutes are plenty enough time for any structural issues like longitudinal flex in the fuselage to compound and destroy the vehicle. But if this worst case scenario does not occur, then the INS will fail to deliver the vehicle to its intended location precisely because of the flight controls system's constant high dynamic range compensation in all flight axes. Basically, what I said is that structural flex at hypersonic speed deviate the missile one way, the flight controls system attempts to compensate to the other way, but because the INS components are of shiddy quality, each compensation is larger than necessary. Think of oversteering, for example.
In a hypersonic vehicle, the flight controls system must be of greater sophistication in terms of sensitivity and fine grain controls of all flight controls surfaces. Same goes for the INS.
I did warned you guys to be careful when you treads into these matters.