U.S. Navy tests Standard Missile 6 extended range anti-air target missile
The U.S. Navy successfully conducted the first test of the Standard Missile 6 extended range anti-air warfare missile.
The missile, launched from the Navy’s Desert Ship at the White Sands Missile Range, successfully intercepted a BQM-74 aerial drone using the newly developed SM-6 active seeker. The active seeker autonomously acquired and engaged the target using the Navy’s legacy command system, resulting in a direct hit. This launch demonstrates the first successful integration of the Navy’s active missile technology into the weapon system to provide for both near-term advanced anti-air warfare and future over-the-horizon capability.
Standard Missile 6 is being developed by Raytheon to meet the Navy’s requirement for an extended range anti-air warfare missile. Expected to deploy in 2011, it provides capability against fixed and rotary wing aircraft and unmanned aerial vehicles and delivers a transformational over-the-horizon counter to the ever-evolving cruise missile threat. Employing the Standard Missile-2 Block IVA airframe and the newly developed active sensor, Standard Missile 6 will also have an inherent capability to fulfill the Navy’s sea-based terminal ballistic missile defense requirement.
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