Aster (missile family) explained
Is Missile: | yes |
Aster |
Origin: | France Italy |
Type: | Surface-to-air/anti-ballistic missile |
Used By: | See Operators |
Manufacturer: | Eurosam |
Service: | 2001–present |
Engine: | Solid propellant, two-stage motor[1] |
Weight: | Aster 15: 310 kg Aster 30: 450 kg |
Length: | Aster 15: 4.2 m Aster 30: 4.9 m |
Diameter: | Aster 15 & 30: 180mm |
Speed: | Aster 15: Mach 3 (1,000 m/s) Aster 30: Mach 4.5 (1,400 m/s) |
Vehicle Range: | Aster 15: 30+ km Aster 30 Block 0 & 1: 120+ km Aster 30 Block 1 NT: 150+ km[2] |
Altitude: | Aster 15: 13 km Aster 30 Block 0 & 1: 20 km Aster 30 Block 1NT: 25 km-class[3] |
Filling: | 15 kg focused fragmented warhead with 2 m lethal radius |
Guidance: |
|
Detonation: | Calculated delay proximity fuze |
Launch Platform: | - Maritime platforms (PAAMS)
- Land-based platforms (SAMP/T)
|
The Aster 15 and Aster 30 are a Franco-Italian family of all-weather, vertical launch surface-to-air missiles.[5] The name "Aster" stands for "Aérospatiale Terminale", with French company Aérospatiale having been the project's lead contractor before its missile activities were merged into MBDA. It also takes inspiration from the word "aster" (Greek, Modern (1453-);: ἀστήρ), meaning "star" in Ancient Greek. The missiles as well as the related weapon systems are manufactured by Eurosam, a consortium consisting of MBDA France, MBDA Italy and Thales, each holding a 33.3% share.
The Aster missiles were developed to intercept and destroy the full spectrum of air threats from high-performance combat aircraft, UAVs and helicopters to cruise, anti-radiation and even sea-skimming supersonic anti-ship missiles.[6] The Aster 30 Block 1 and Block 1 NT were designed to counter ballistic missiles.[1]
The Aster is primarily operated by France, Italy, as well as the United Kingdom as an export customer, and is an integrated component of the PAAMS air defence system, known in the Royal Navy as Sea Viper. As the principal weapon of the PAAMS, the Aster equips the s in French and Italian service as well as the British Type 45 destroyers. It equips the French and Italian FREMM multipurpose frigates, though not through the PAAMS air defense suite itself but specific French and Italian derivatives of the system.
History
During the 1980s, the predominant missiles in Franco-Italian service were short-range systems such as the French Crotale, Italian Selenia Aspide or American Sea Sparrow, with ranges up to a dozen kilometres. Some vessels were also equipped with the American medium/long range RIM-66 Standard. France and Italy decided to start development of a domestic medium/long range surface-to-air missile to enter service in the first decade of the 21st century, that would give them comparable range but superior interception capability to the American Standard or British Sea Dart already in service.
Thought was given in particular to the new missile's ability to intercept next-generation supersonic anti-ship missiles, such as the BrahMos missile developed jointly by India and Russia. This allowed the actual systems to have the characteristic of being specialised either in short-to-medium range "point defence" for e.g. ships, or in medium-to-long range "zone defence" of fleets.
In May 1989, a memorandum of understanding was signed between France and Italy for the development of a family of future surface-to air-missiles. Eurosam was formed shortly afterwards. By July 1995 development had taken shape in the form of the Aster missile, and test firing of the first Aster 30 took place. The missile successfully intercepted a target at an altitude of 15000m (49,000feet) and at speeds of 1000km/h. A Phase 2 contract was awarded in 1997 at US$1 billion for pre-production and development of the French-Italian land and naval systems.
During development trials between 1993 and 1994 all flight sequences, altitudes and ranges, were validated. This was also the period during which the launch sequence of Aster 30 was validated. In May 1996, trials of the Aster 15 active electromagnetic final guidance system against live targets began. All six attempts were successful. During 1997 Aster was extensively tested, this time being pitted against targets such as the Aerospatiale C.22 target and first generation Exocet anti-ship missiles.
In numerous engagements Aster scored direct impacts on its targets. During an engagement in November 1997 in a strong countermeasures environment, the Aster was not armed with its military warhead, so that the distance between the Aster and the target could be recorded. The target, a C22, was recovered bearing two strong cuts made by the fins of the Aster missile.
In May 2001, Aster again completed the "manufacturer's validation firing test". It was deployed for the first time on the French nuclear-powered aircraft carrier . In June 2001, the Aster achieved a successful interception of an Arabel missile at low altitude in less than five seconds. In 2001, a target simulating an aircraft flying at speeds of Mach 1 and at an altitude of 100m (300feet) was intercepted by an Aster 15. The first ever operational firing of the Aster missile took place during October 2002 on board Charles de Gaulle.
In November 2003, Eurosam was awarded the 3 billion euro Phase 3 production contract. Full production and exports to France, Italy, Saudi Arabia and the United Kingdom started. The resulting Aster surface-to-air missile meets inter-service and international requirements, addressing the needs of the land, air and naval forces of France, Italy and the United Kingdom. The decision to base the missile around a common terminal intercept "dart" to which different sized boosters can be attached, has made it modular and extensible.
From 2002 to 2005, the Italian experimental frigate provided a test bed for live firing trials of the Aster 15 from Sylver A43 launchers with EMPAR and SAAM-it systems, and the trials of Aster 30 from Sylver A50 launchers with EMPAR and PAAMS(E) systems.[7], France had spent €4.1bn at 2010 prices on 10 SAMP/T launchers, 375 Aster 30 missiles and 200 Aster 15 missiles.[8] Another 80 Aster 30 and 40 Aster 15 were purchased for France's s under a separate programme.
In January 2023, the Italian and French Minister of Defense signed with MBDA a $2 billion contract for the purchase of 700 Aster missiles.[9] [10]
Characteristics
There are two versions of the Aster missile family, the short-medium range version, the Aster 15, and the long range version, the Aster 30. The missile bodies are identical. Their difference in range and intercept speed is because Aster 30 uses a much larger booster. Total weights of the Aster 15 and Aster 30 are and respectively.
The Aster 15 is long, rising to just under for the Aster 30. Aster 15 has a diameter of . Given the larger dimensions of the Aster 30, a naval based system requires the longer tubes of the Sylver A50 or A70 vertical launching system (VLS). The American Mark 41 Vertical Launching System can accommodate Aster 30.
Variants
- Aster 15: Short to medium range surface-to-air missile
- Aster 15 EC : New version of the Aster 15 with twice the range (60+ km); under development as of 2023 and expected to be introduced in 2030[11]
- Aster 30 Block 0: Medium to long range surface-to-air missile. It can pull manoeuvres in excess of 50g.[12]
- Aster 30 Block 1: Variant with anti-ballistic missile capability; tailored to counter -class short-range ballistic missiles.
- Aster 30 Block 1NT: NT standing for "New Technology", it is a new variant of the Aster 30 designed to counter short and -class medium-range ballistic missiles.[13]
- Aster 30 Block 2 BMD – Anti-ballistic missile under development and intended to counter up to -class ballistic and maneuvering missiles.
The Aster 30 Block 1 is used on the Eurosam SAMP/T system operated by the French Air and Space Force and the Italian Army.[14] In 2015, France launched the development of the Block 1NT variant, a programm Italy would join in 2016. The same year, the United Kingdom showed interest in acquiring the Block 1NT version for its Type 45 destroyers currently operating the Block 0.[15] In 2022, the United Kingdom announced a series of upgrades to its Type 45 destroyers. This included the implementation of the Block 1 version for anti-ship ballistic missile defense.[16]
Deployment
Naval systems
Land systems
The Aster 30 has been incorporated by Eurosam into a mobile SAM system, fulfilling the ground-based theatre air defence/protection requirement. It comes in the form of the Sol-Air Moyenne-Portée/Terrestre (French for "Surface-to-Air Medium-Range/Land-based"), abbreviated as SAMP/T. The system uses a network of radars and sensors – including 3D phased array radar – enabling it to be effective against various air threats such as aircraft, tactical ballistic missiles, standoff missiles, cruise missiles or anti-radiation missiles.
The SAMP/T uses an upgraded version of the Arabel long range radar, developed under the Aster 30 block 1 upgrade program, in order to extend the system's capability against higher speed and higher altitude targets. The Aster 30 Block 1 can intercept missiles with a range (short-range ballistic missiles).[17]
Testing
- In April 2008, RSS Intrepid, a of the Republic of Singapore Navy, shot down an aerial drone off the French port of Toulon during a naval exercise. Then again in 2010, a frigate of the same class, RSS Supreme fired an Aster 15 and shot down an aerial drone off the coast of Hawaii as part of exercise RIMPAC 2010. The RSN conducted 6 successful live-firings of the Aster missile over 11 years.
- Beginning with in September 2010, all of the Royal Navy's Type 45 destroyers have successfully intercepted Mirach drones with Aster missiles at the Benbecula ranges off the Outer Hebrides, Scotland. Mirach is a jet which flies at speeds of up to at altitudes as low as or as high as .[18] [19] [20]
- In December 2011, an Aster 30 missile downed an Israeli Black Sparrow ballistic missile target, the first time an Aster missile had attempted such an engagement.[21]
- In April 2012, the,, of the French Navy downed an American GQM-163 Coyote target simulating a sea-skimming supersonic anti-ship cruise missile traveling at Mach 2.5 (3000 km/h) with an altitude of less than 5 metres. It was the first time a European missile defence system destroyed a supersonic sea-skimming missile. The trial was described as a complex operational scenario.[6]
- In 2021, during the Exercise At-Sea Demo: Formidable Shield 2021, the Horizon-class frigate Forbin, intercepted a supersonic (>3000 km/h) sea skimming target using an Aster 30 missile.[22] [23]
- In 2024, during the EU operation in the Red Sea, it is likely that the French Navy utilised Aster 30 to intercept three Houthi ballistic missiles.[24] The missile was also likely used by the Royal Navy to down another Houthi ballistic missile in April 2024.[25]
Operators
Current operators
- Algeria
- Egypt
- France
- Greece
- Italy
- Morocco
- Qatar
- Saudi Arabia
- Singapore
- Ukraine According to a news report of May 2023, "The Franco-Italian anti-aircraft missile system has arrived in Ukraine, and it will be serviced by 20 local experts."[30] [31] Italy announced that it was sending a second SAMP/T system to Ukraine. The date of arrival was not announced.[32]
- United Kingdom
Potential operators
- Turkey
- Turkish Air Force – In January 2018, a contract was signed during a state visit by the President of Turkey in Paris for a project with Eurosam for a future Long Range Air and Missile Defense System (LORAMIDS) for a period of 18 months where Turkish companies Roketsan and Aselsan would participate in the joint-production of the missile system.[33] It was stated that the SAMP/T air defense system project, which was stopped at the end of 2019 due to Turkey's launch of Operation Peace Spring in Syria, came to the agenda at the NATO Summit, and that Turkey, France and Italy would revive the project.[34]
- Croatia
- Croatian Air Force – In a decisive strategic initiative to fortify its national air and missile defense capabilities, the Republic of Croatia is evaluating the SAMP/T NG missile defense system, outfitted with Aster 30 B1 NT missiles. This procurement would underscore Croatia's proactive efforts to bolster its military infrastructure amidst dynamically evolving global security challenges.
See also
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: 31 May 2022 . Aster 15 & 30 Datasheet .
- Web site: Eurosam unveils new SAMP/T air defense variant at Dubai Airshow . 16 November 2021 .
- Web site: 1 April 2024 . ASTER SAMP/T NG Datasheet 2023.
- Web site: MBDA - Excellence at your side. https://web.archive.org/web/20120511001439/http://www.mbda-systems.com/mediagallery/files/aster_ds.pdf. dead. 11 May 2012. MBDA.
- http://www.eurosam.com/products/naval-systems/ Eurosam: Naval Systems – Aster 15 & 30/PAAMS
- News: Interception d'une cible supersonique évoluant au ras de l'eau.. 31 July 2016. French Ministry of Defence. defense.gouv.fr. 5 April 2012.
- Book: Galati, Gaspare. 100 Years of Radar. Springer. New York. 2016. 234–235. 9783319005836.
- Web site: Projet de loi de finances pour 2013 : Défense : équipement des forces . fr . Senate of France . 22 November 2012 . 2013-11-07.
- News: France and Italy to buy close to 700 Aster missiles. . 30 January 2023 .
- Web site: Media: Italy and France agreed to order 700 Aster-30 missiles for the SAMP/T air defense system promised to Ukraine. 28 January 2023. babel.ua. 7 August 2023.
- Web site: 2024-02-20 . Aster 15 : MBDA développe une nouvelle version de son tueur de missiles Mer et Marine . 2024-02-26 . www.meretmarine.com . fr.
- Sweetman . Bill . Cook . Nick . Getting to grips with missile defence . Interavia Business & Technology . April 1999 . 54 . 630 . 35 . 1423-3215.
- Web site: MBDA Press Information June 2014: The Aster Missile Family . 26 November 2015 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150330142007/http://www.mbda-systems.com/mediagallery/files/aster-family_background-1402652367.pdf . 30 March 2015.
- Web site: ASTER – SAMP/T. https://web.archive.org/web/20120629091805/http://www.eurosam.com/ground.html. dead. 29 June 2012.
- Book: UK-France Summit: Annex on security and defence. 3 March 2016. gov.uk. 5 August 2016.
- Web site: Type 45 Ballistic Missile Defence upgrade to support more than 100 UK jobs . 2022-05-24 . GOV.UK . en.
- Web site: Eurosam: Ground-launched systems. www.eurosam.com. Eurosam. 5 August 2016. 10 February 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180210192710/http://www.eurosam.com/products/ground-launched-systems/. dead.
- News: HMS Daring fires Sea Viper for first time. 5 August 2016. Ministry of Defence. gov.uk. 19 May 2011.
- News: HMS Diamond fires Sea Viper missile for first time. 5 August 2016. Ministry of Defence. gov.uk. 1 May 2012.
- News: Defender ready to live up to her name after successful first Sea Viper firing. 5 August 2016. Navy News. navynews.co.uk. 16 May 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20171017202909/https://navynews.co.uk/archive/news/item/10525. 17 October 2017. dead.
- Web site: Une première en France : un missile intercepté par un antimissile Aster. 1 December 2011. marianne.net. 4 August 2016. 16 August 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160816203205/http://www.marianne.net/blogsecretdefense/Une-premiere-en-France-un-missile-intercepte-par-un-antimissile-Aster_a442.html. dead.
- News: French Navy Horizon Air Defense Destroyer Intercepts Supersonic Target. 14 June 2021. Naval News. May 2021.
- News: The French FS Forbin destroys a supersonic target with a combat loaded Aster 30 fire during At-Sea Demo/Formidable Shield 2021. 14 June 2021. Naval Striking and Support Forces NATO. 28 May 2021.
- Web site: Vavasseur . Xavier . 2024-03-21 . French Navy Air Defense FREMM Intercepts 3 Ballistic Missiles . 2024-04-01 . Naval News . en-US.
- News: HMS Diamond makes first Sea Viper anti-ballistic missile kill in action in the Red Sea . 25 April 2024 . Navy Lookout . 25 April 2024.
- Web site: Italian shipyard Fincantieri delivered amphibious ship Kalaat Beni-Abbes to Algerian Navy . Administrator . navyrecognition.com . 4 August 2016 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160807033714/http://www.navyrecognition.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1985%5B%2Frtl . 7 August 2016 .
- News: DCNS the FREMM Frigate Tahya Misr to the Egyptian Navy . 24 June 2015 . en.
- Web site: Strengthening Air Defense: Italian Air Force Acquires SAMP/T NG Missile System. airrecognition.com. 7 August 2023.
- Web site: 16/06/2016. fincantieri.it. 4 August 2016.
- News: French-Italian SAMP-T air defense system arrives in Ukraine. Yahoo! News . 16 May 2023.
- News: What did the Russians hit in Kyiv? Patriot or something else?. bulgarianmilitary . Boyko Nikolov. 16 May 2023.
- News: Italy to send Ukraine second SAMP/T air defense system, foreign minister confirms. 4 June 2024 . Chris York . The Kyiv Independent . 3 June 2024 . en.
- Web site: Turkey Buys from Russia; also Mulls European Missile Systems. 2021-01-10. ainonline.com.
- Web site: Haber7 . Türkiye, Fransa ve İtalya'dan SAMP-T projesini yeniden canlandırma hamlesi . 2022-03-30 . Haber7 . tr.
- Web site: Teraz.sk . 2024-06-20 . Kaliňák: Vláda intenzívne rokuje o ponukách na protivzdušnú obranu . 2024-06-22 . TERAZ.sk . sk.