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INS Arihanth

if you fiddle around with image editing software yo can see the tail of the sub
4661667237_465b71d609_b.jpg

I think your outline is slightly incorrect, one can almost see a similar if slightly slanted fin on the right. This looks more like slanted vertical tails on the F-18 to me. :cheers:
 
Can we have some info on the sub is she a nuke sub thx ?

INS Arhant at a glance (what is in public domain)......


Type: SSBN/SSGN
Builder: Hindustan Shipyard (Shipbuilding Centre), Vishakhapatnam along with BARC, DRDO, other public and private industries.
Number built: 1
Under-construction: 2
Planed: 5
Displacement: ~6500 ton (submerged)
Length: ~110 m
Beam: 15 m
Draft: 11 m
Reactor: 80/85 MW PHW
Crew: ~100
Sonars and other sensors: Most of them developed by the DRDO and some may be bought from foreign countries.
Armament:
12 Sagarika missile (Range: 750 km with 1000 kg warhead)
or future Agni-3SL with MIRV
Torpedo
 
INS Arhant at a glance (what is in public domain)......


Type: SSBN/SSGN
Builder: Hindustan Shipyard (Shipbuilding Centre), Vishakhapatnam along with BARC, DRDO, other public and private industries.
Number built: 1
Under-construction: 2
Planed: 5
Displacement: ~6500 ton (submerged)
Length: ~110 m
Beam: 15 m
Draft: 11 m
Reactor: 80/85 MW PHW
Crew: ~100
Sonars and other sensors: Most of them developed by the DRDO and some may be bought from foreign countries.
Armament:
12 Sagarika missile (Range: 750 km with 1000 kg warhead)
or future Agni-3SL with MIRV
Torpedo
You forgot Shaurya Kinetic.....I just love this missile.....Quasi ballistic..
 
Sagarika and Shourya are the same missile. One for navy and another for the army.
No I dont think so, Sagarika is an SLBM, which is a ballistic missile. Shaurya is a hypersonic cruise missile which is a hybrid missile....
Shaurya is is now conceived as the primary weapon for Arihant, even though there is Sagarika...
 
scientist said that functioning of nuclear reactor of ins arihant was the key thing,
what is the latest news on that.
 
scientist said that functioning of nuclear reactor of ins arihant was the key thing,
what is the latest news on that.


wt du mean? isnt propulsion supposed to come from the nuclear reactor anyways? :blink:
 
Sagarika and Shourya are the same missile. One for navy and another for the army.

Kinetic Brother,

As per the latest updates u'll be happy to know that Infact the K-15 Sagarika and Shaurya are quite different.

Happy- Because K-15 is a SLBM while Shaurya, against all speculations is a HYBRID and HYPERSONIC CRUIZE MISSILE .

So Shaurya = Range+Payload+Speed+Accuracy

Infact it was Dr. Saraswat Himself who made this revelation.

The Shaurya missile is speculated to be the land version of the under-water Sagarika K-15 missile[8], although DRDO officials have reportedly denied its connection with the K-15 program[3] Similar to the BrahMos,

Shaurya missile was revealed to be designed specifically to be fired from Submarines. Top DRDO scientist has confirmed this and said that this missile is actually a Hypersonic cruse missile and not a ballistic missile, as it was earlier thought to be. [11]
 
No I dont think so, Sagarika is an SLBM, which is a ballistic missile. Shaurya is a hypersonic cruise missile which is a hybrid missile....
Shaurya is is now conceived as the primary weapon for Arihant, even though there is Sagarika...

no mate Sagarika is the name of the naval version of Shourya. Both are same missile. Actually the missile was developed as Sagarika while later the land version was given the name Shourya.
 
Kinetic Bro.. Just see this Interview...

Shaurya surfaces as India's underwater nuclear missile
Ajai Shukla / New Delhi February 17, 2010, 0:04 IST

The country’s top defence scientist has, for the first time, revealed that India’s new Shaurya missile, which can carry a one-tonne nuclear warhead over 750 kilometers, is specially designed to be fired from Indian submarines and could form the crucial third leg of India’s nuclear deterrent.

If launched from a submarine off the China coast, it could hit several Chinese cities like Beijing, Nanjing and Shanghai.

Air and land-based nuclear weapons are delivered to their targets by fighter aircraft and ballistic missiles, respectively. Since these can be knocked out by an enemy first strike, the most reliable nuclear deterrent has traditionally been underwater, missiles hidden in a submarine.

V K Saraswat, the DRDO chief and Scientific Advisor to the Defence Minister, revealed to Business Standard at the ongoing Defexpo 2010, “We have designed the Shaurya so that it can be launched from under water as easily as from land. The gas-filled canister that houses the missile fits easily into a submarine. The underwater leg of the nuclear triad needs to be totally reliable and needs a state-of-the-art missile.”

India’s undersea deterrent had so far revolved around the K-15 ballistic missile, built with significant help from Russia. The K-15 was to equip the INS Arihant, India’s lone nuclear-powered submarine, which is being constructed in Visakhapatnam. But now, after rigorous underwater testing, the Shaurya could be the mainstay of Arihant’s arsenal.

“The Shaurya was developed from ground up as a submarine-capable missile,” confirms Dr Prahlada, the top DRDO scientist responsible for liaising with the military. “Every piece of technology for fitting it in a submarine is already in place.”

Shortly before the Defexpo 2010, Dr Saraswat had publicly stated that India’s missile technology was ahead of China’s and Pakistan’s.

Now top DRDO scientists have revealed that the Shaurya is not a ballistic missile, as it has been thought to be; it is actually a hypersonic cruise missile, which never leaves the atmosphere.

A ballistic missile is like a stone being lobbed towards a target. Rockets toss it upwards and towards the target; after the rocket burns out, gravity pulls the missile warhead down towards the target. Buffeted by wind and re-entry forces, accuracy is a problem; and, since the ballistic missile’s path is predictable, shooting it down is relatively easy.

The Shaurya has none of these issues. Its solid-fuel, two-stage rocket accelerates the missile to six times the speed of sound before it reaches an altitude of 40 kilometers (125,000 feet), after which it levels out and cruises towards the target, powered by its onboard fuel.

While ballistic missiles cannot correct their course midway, the Shaurya is an intelligent missile. Onboard navigation computers kick in near the target, guiding the missile to the target and eliminating errors that inevitably creep in during its turbulent journey.

The Shaurya, say DRDO sources, will strike within 20-30 metres of its target after travelling 750 kilometres.

Conventional cruise missiles, like the American Tomahawk and the Indo-Russian Brahmos, offer similar accuracy. But their air-breathing engines carry them along slowly, rendering them vulnerable to enemy aircraft and missiles. The Shaurya’s solid-fuel, air-independent engine propels it along at hypersonic speeds, leaving enemy fighters and missiles far behind.

“I would say the Shaurya is a hybrid propulsion missile”, says Dr Saraswat. “Like a ballistic missile, it is powered by solid fuel. And, like a cruise missile, it can guide itself right up to the target.”

Making the Shaurya even more capable is its ability to manoeuvre, following a twisting path to the target that makes it very difficult to shoot it down. In contrast, a ballistic missile is predictable; its trajectory gives away its target and its path to it.
 
kia bat hy. icko dhagy sy khnchty ho kia? :lol:

No Yaar.
This is a Model that the Children of India will play with and feel proud of their Motherland which ALONE has the Posession of such a Deadly Technology/Weapon in SA.

So that they May Grow up as a Scientist and Develop Even Deadlier Nuclear Subs/Missiles/Technology whose thought itself deters the enemy.
 
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