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Indian Tech to increase Missile Range by a Third:with citation

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14 May 2008



Bangalore: Very soon Indian missiles will fly lighter and longer thanks to an innovative technology developed by the prestigious Indian Institute of Science (IISc) here. Scientists have confirmed that a layer of chromium coating, applied to the nose of a missile, has the potential of increasing its range by at least a third.

According to reports, scientists at the Department of Aerospace Engineering and Department of Inorganic and Physical Chemistry of the IISc have successfully demonstrated the potential of the coating to increase the range of a missile by at least 30 per cent without adding fuel.

According to the project's lead scientist, Professor KPJ Reddy, Department of Aerospace Engineering, the chromium coating reduces the aerodynamic drag encountered by a missile or a space vehicle by up to 47 per cent.

''As the chromium coating evaporates with the enormous frictional heat generated during hypersonic flight, it reacts with the oxygen atoms present in the atmosphere and produces chromium oxide,''Reddy said. ''This reaction is exothermic, that is producing more heat, thereby decreasing the density of the air around the nose of the missile. As the pressure reduces, so does the drag force, which in turn enables the missile to increase its range.''


The nose of a missile, conventionally blunted in order to reduce heating, increases the drag. This considerably reduces the range. ''Large amounts of fuel are needed to compensate for the drag and to give the vehicle thrust,'' said Reddy. ''With this technology, we increase the range without using additional fuel.''

The scientist confirmed that the technology would be used not only for application on missiles, but also on space vehicles. He said that a patent application for the technology, which was invented six months ago, had already been accepted.

domain-b.com : Indigenous technology to increase range of Indian missiles by a third

Citation

Aerodynamic drag reduction by heat addition into the shock layer for a large angle blunt cone in hypersonic flow - ePrints@IISc
 
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Congrats to our scientists.....developing courage is far important than developing missile I think. Israel never compromise with its national security matters and not bothering about its int'l image.
 
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14 May 2008



Bangalore: Very soon Indian missiles will fly lighter and longer thanks to an innovative technology developed by the prestigious Indian Institute of Science (IISc) here. Scientists have confirmed that a layer of chromium coating, applied to the nose of a missile, has the potential of increasing its range by at least a third.

According to reports, scientists at the Department of Aerospace Engineering and Department of Inorganic and Physical Chemistry of the IISc have successfully demonstrated the potential of the coating to increase the range of a missile by at least 30 per cent without adding fuel.

According to the project's lead scientist, Professor KPJ Reddy, Department of Aerospace Engineering, the chromium coating reduces the aerodynamic drag encountered by a missile or a space vehicle by up to 47 per cent.

''As the chromium coating evaporates with the enormous frictional heat generated during hypersonic flight, it reacts with the oxygen atoms present in the atmosphere and produces chromium oxide,''Reddy said. ''This reaction is exothermic, that is producing more heat, thereby decreasing the density of the air around the nose of the missile. As the pressure reduces, so does the drag force, which in turn enables the missile to increase its range.''


The nose of a missile, conventionally blunted in order to reduce heating, increases the drag. This considerably reduces the range. ''Large amounts of fuel are needed to compensate for the drag and to give the vehicle thrust,'' said Reddy. ''With this technology, we increase the range without using additional fuel.''

The scientist confirmed that the technology would be used not only for application on missiles, but also on space vehicles. He said that a patent application for the technology, which was invented six months ago, had already been accepted.

domain-b.com : Indigenous technology to increase range of Indian missiles by a third

Citation

Aerodynamic drag reduction by heat addition into the shock layer for a large angle blunt cone in hypersonic flow - ePrints@IISc
Am not sure where the breakthrough lies ; NASA has had "hot structures" like Inconel since at least 4 decades, which is a chromium-nickel alloy. Is this breakthrough in the costeffectiveness of a newer alloy that reduces drag with the same payload ? Unless the article is explored, which i am afraid could mean a minuscule increment, this is not much of a breakthrough.
 
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14 May 2008



Bangalore: Very soon Indian missiles will fly lighter and longer thanks to an innovative technology developed by the prestigious Indian Institute of Science (IISc) here. Scientists have confirmed that a layer of chromium coating, applied to the nose of a missile, has the potential of increasing its range by at least a third.

According to reports, scientists at the Department of Aerospace Engineering and Department of Inorganic and Physical Chemistry of the IISc have successfully demonstrated the potential of the coating to increase the range of a missile by at least 30 per cent without adding fuel.

According to the project's lead scientist, Professor KPJ Reddy, Department of Aerospace Engineering, the chromium coating reduces the aerodynamic drag encountered by a missile or a space vehicle by up to 47 per cent.

''As the chromium coating evaporates with the enormous frictional heat generated during hypersonic flight, it reacts with the oxygen atoms present in the atmosphere and produces chromium oxide,''Reddy said. ''This reaction is exothermic, that is producing more heat, thereby decreasing the density of the air around the nose of the missile. As the pressure reduces, so does the drag force, which in turn enables the missile to increase its range.''


The nose of a missile, conventionally blunted in order to reduce heating, increases the drag. This considerably reduces the range. ''Large amounts of fuel are needed to compensate for the drag and to give the vehicle thrust,'' said Reddy. ''With this technology, we increase the range without using additional fuel.''

The scientist confirmed that the technology would be used not only for application on missiles, but also on space vehicles. He said that a patent application for the technology, which was invented six months ago, had already been accepted.

domain-b.com : Indigenous technology to increase range of Indian missiles by a third

Citation

Aerodynamic drag reduction by heat addition into the shock layer for a large angle blunt cone in hypersonic flow - ePrints@IISc

Congrats to the scientist but i dont think its a ground braking achievement and highly spectikal will this tech be used on big scale
 
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That means....:D

IISc is one of the most innovative and toughest institute to get into. The level of work their is just too awesome.
 
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^^?????? if this news is allowed to be posted on websites, then obviously its declassified
 
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That means....:D

IISc is one of the most innovative and toughest institute to get into. The level of work their is just too awesome.

One has to secure among top 30 positions in GATE to be in the selection list of IISc Bangalore, out of 7,80,000 applicants. :D

Can Ivy League come any near to such tough competition?

Thanks for letting the bl00dy secret out!!! Especially on a Pakistani defence forum!! Jeeez! :angry: :lol:

Blame it on me.

Along with that, i have many more research citations on Indian AESA radar development, directed energy project, missile guidance algorithms. ;)
 
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More like fuel-saving than range-extender.

Increasing the range would mean improving the overall components of the missile like guidance etc.
What this addition does is to reduce the amount of fuel wasted by drag on the surface.
 
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One has to secure among top 30 positions in GATE to be in the selection list of IISc Bangalore, out of 7,80,000 applicants. :D

Can Ivy League come any near to such tough competition?


Blame it on me.

Along with that, i have many more research citations on Indian AESA radar development, directed energy project, missile guidance algorithms. ;)

Can you post here if they are not classified? :D
 
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