AIM-9 SIDEWINDER
The AIM-9 Sidewinder is a heat-seeking, short-range,
air-to-air missile carried mostly by fighter aircraft and recently, certain
gunship helicopters. The missile entered service with the United States Navy in
the mid-1950s, and variants and upgrades remain in active service with many air
forces after five decades. The United States Air Force purchased the Sidewinder
after the missile was developed by the United States Navy at China Lake,
California.
The
Sidewinder is the most widely used missile in the West, with more than 110,000
missiles produced for the U.S. and 27 other nations, of which perhaps one
percent have been used in combat. It has been built under license by some other
nations including Sweden. The AIM-9 is one of the oldest, least expensive, and
most successful air-to-air missiles, with an estimated 270 aircraft kills in
its history of use.

The rear stabilizing wings provide the necessary lift to
keep the missile aloft. Each of the four rear wings is outfitted with a simple
stabilizing device called a rolleron. The rolleron is essential to provide a
fixed roll axis orientation of the missile. Basically, a rolleron is a metal
wheel with notches cut into it. As the missile speeds through the air, the air
current spins the rolleron like a pinwheel. A spinning wheel resists lateral
forces acting on it. In this case, the gyroscopic motion counteracts the
missile's tendency to roll - to rotate about its central axis.
HISTORY OF SIDEWINDER
The development of the Sidewinder missile began in 1946 at the
Naval Ordnance Test Station (NOTS), Inyokern, California, now the Naval Air
Weapons Station China Lake, California as an in-house research project
conceived by William B. McLean. McLean initially called his effort "Local
Fuze Project 602" using laboratory funding, volunteer help and fuze
funding to develop what it called a heat-homing rocket. It did not receive
official funding until 1951 when the effort was mature enough to show to
Admiral William "Deak" Parsons, the Deputy Chief of the Bureau of
Ordnance (BuOrd). It subsequently received designation as a program in 1952.
The Sidewinder introduced several new technologies that made it simpler and
much more reliable than its United States Air Force (USAF) counterpart, the
AIM-4 Falcon, under development during the same period. After disappointing
experiences with the Falcon in the Vietnam War, the Air Force replaced its
Falcons with Sidewinder
THE SIDEWINDER DESIGN
- Nose dome
- Reticle
- Detector (or “seeker”)
- Cooling system
- Guidance Control System
- Control actuation and flight fins
- Stabilizing wings
- Rocket motor
- Fuzing system
- Warhead
- Battery
NOSE DOME
To allow infrared light to fall on the mirror, and to be
passed to the detector, the nose dome has to be transparent to (infrared)
light. The initial AIM-9B field model used a (special) glass nose dome window.
In all later models, the glass nose dome was replaced by a much smaller
polycrystalline Magnesium Fluoride (MgF2) dome, which provides better
transparency to longer wavelength (cooler) infrared emissions, thus aldo
allowing more faint infrared emissions to be passed to the detector. The forth
generation models use a glass dome again, to provide unobstructed (off
bore-sight) view for the Focal Plane Array seeker.
STEERING MIRROR
The Wiorld War II Enzian missile used an infrared detector
mounted in front of a steering mirror. When the long axis of the mirror, the
missile axis and the line of sight to the target all fell in the same plane,
the reflected rays from the target reached the detector (provided the target
was not very far off axis). Therefore, the angle of the mirror at the instant
of detection estimated the direction of the target in the roll axis of the
missile. The yaw/pitch direction of the target depended on how far to the outer
edge of the mirror the target was. If the target was further off axis, the rays
reaching the detector would be reflected from the outer edge of the mirror. If
the target was closer on axis, the rays would be reflected from closer to the
centre of the mirror.
RETILE

A reticle is essentially a modulator that chops the scene,
using sequentially arranged transparent and opaque spokes on a spinning disk in
front of the detector. The detector sees the scene chopped by the reticle at
the spin rate times the number of reticle spokes. The reticle design allows the
sensor to detect when it is spinning past the zero-point, allowing the angle of
arrival of target sources to be determined. A single detector can then be used
to perceive angular information to the target. The reticle also improves the
signal-to-noise ratio by limiting the instantaneous field-of-view (FOV) of the
detector. Small, point source targets are emphasized because they transmit
their energy through a single reticle spoke. Large, extended source targets are
minimized because their energy is spread between transparent and opaque spokes.
DETECTOR ELEMENT
LEAD SULPHIDE(PbS)
Early Sidewinder models used lead sulfide (PbS) as
photoconductive compound. PbS is relatively cheap and easy to manufacture. The
legacy AIM-9B model has an uncooled PbS detector had a peak sensitivity in the
2 um region which limits the missile to stern engagements because the missile
seeker has to look at the hot turbine in the in the engine tail pipe to see
enough infrared energy to be able to track the target.
INDIUM ANTIMONIDE(InSb)
Third
generation (all-aspect) models (from the AIM-9L on), use Indium Antimonide as
photo conductive compound, which is much more sensitive and thus offers target
acquisition from any aspect at substantially greater ranges. Indium Antimonide
seekers cooled to the temperature of liquid nitrogen (77K) have peak
sensitivity in the 3-4 um region. Non-afterburning engines have theor peak
emission in this region from both the hot metal and the exhaust plume.
MERCURY CADMIUM TELLURIDE(HgCdTe)
HgCdTe
is a well established material with excellent sensitivity extending down to the
8-12 micron band (cool targets, ie FLIR applications, satellite tracking,
detecting stealth vehicles ) but it is difficult to fabricate arrays from
because of a very large variation in sensitivity from detector to detector.
Such an array will introduce clutter (noise) into the image it views and this
will understandably make it more difficult for the image processing algorithm
to sift targets from the background.
PLATINUM SILICIDE
Another alternative is the use of Platinum Silicide which is
unfortunately about fifty times less sensitive than HgCdTe and is spectrally
limited to the 2.5-4 micron band(ie hot targets such as aircraft/airframes,
vehicles, missile exhaust plumes); its strength lies in high uniformity of
array sensitivity and ease of fabrication and thus low cost, commercial Silicon
fabrication techniques are used as for eg MOS memory chips. This infers another
major advantage, the ability to embed within the same slab of Silicon all the
necessary electronics to scan and read out the image from the array, thus
radically cutting the cost and complexity of the optical system as a whole.
COOLING
With
an infra-red guided missile such as the Sidewinder, the discriminating ability
of the seeker head — i.e. the ability to discriminate between different heat
sources and their respective backgrounds — depends on the seeker head's own
temperature, relative to the temperature of the ambient air. Therefore, the
seeker head of an active missile is cooled up to minus 160 degrees Celsius in
order to establish optimal sensitivity. The effective range of a cooled missile
is 10-16 km, depending on the weather conditions — clouds tend to
"mask" infra-red radiation — and the degree of humidity. The initial
AIM-9B was uncooled. As a result, target acquisition and lock-on was extremely
difficult, as experienced in combat by he US services. From the AIM-9D model
on, the infra red detector was cooled. The US Navy and US Marine Corps used 6
litre nitrogen bottles in the LAU-7 launch rail, providing for 2.5 hours of
seeker cool down, reflecting the primary fleet defence requirement. The US Air
Force opted for Peltier thermoelectric cooling, allowing unlimited cooling time
while the missile was on the launch rail (and – of course – power was applied).
Later models use an internal Argon cooling system, eliminating the need for use
of nitrogen bottles or internal bottles. The seeker head is cooled with
specially treated air (officially the expensive Argon should be used instead).
GUIDANCE CONTROL SECTION
The control actuation section adjusts flight fins near the
nose of the missile based on instructions from the guidance electronics. A
servo assembly includes a gas generator that feeds high-pressure gas to
pneumatic pistons. The pistons are connected to rocker arms, which move the
flight fins back and forth. The command signal from guidance control activates
electric solenoids, which open and close valves leading to these pistons in
order to tilt the fins from side to side. The flight fins themselves steer the
missiles through the air -just like the flaps on an airplane wing.
CONTROL ACTUATION AND FLIGHT FINS
The control actuation section adjusts flight fins near the
nose of the missile based on instructions from the guidance electronics. A
servo assembly includes a gas generator that feeds high-pressure gas to
pneumatic pistons. The pistons are connected to rocker arms, which move the
flight fins back and forth. The command signal from guidance control activates
electric solenoids, which open and close valves leading to these pistons in
order to tilt the fins from side to side.
REAR STABILIZING WINGS AND ROLLERONS

ROCKET MOTOR
The
rocket motor provides the thrust to propel the missile through the air. The
Hercules Mk 36 is used mostly (in several versions), although some earlier models
used the Thiokol Mk.17. Once the propellant has burned up, the missile glides
the rest of the way to its target. The Mk 36 Mod 7 rocket motor uses a
single-grain propellant. A non propulsive head closure located on the forward
end of the motor tube, blows out if the motor is accidentally ignited without
the warhead installed, making the motor non propulsive (a fire hazard vice a
missile hazard). The Mk 36 Mod 8 rocket motor is basically identical to the Mod
7 motor except that the Mod 8 motor is equipped with a safe-arm ignition
assembly. The purpose of this assembly is to prevent accidental or inadvertent
rocket motor ignition. The safe-arm ignition assembly must be manually rotated
to the armed position before flight.
FUZE SYSTEM
The Sidewinder isn't designed to go off when it actually
hits the target; it's designed to go off when it gets very close to the target.
The missile control system uses an fuzing system to figure out when it's within
range and to detonate the warhead. Early models used a passive infrared fuse,
later models have eight laser-emitter gallium-arsenide (GaAs) laser diodes and
eight infrared sensors arranged around the outside of the missile airframe,
just behind the flight fins.
WARHEAD
Early generation Sidewinders carried a blast/fragmentation
warhead. The US Navy opted for a continuous rod warhead. Third and fourth
generation Sidewinders carry the 20-pound (9-kg) WDU-17/B warhead. The WDU-17/B
consists of a case assembly filled with PBXN-3 high explosive, booster plates,
an initiator device and nearly 200 titanium fragmentation rods. When the fuzing
system detects the target, it triggers the warhead by sending an explosive
charge through the initiator (a train of low-explosive material) to the booster
plates. The explosive charge from the initiator ignites low-explosive material
in the booster plate channels, which ignites explosive pellets surrounding the
high-explosive material. The pellets ignite the high explosive, causing it to
release a huge amount of hot gas in a short amount of time. The powerful
explosive force from this expanding gas blasts the titanium rods outward,
breaking them apart to form thousands of metal pieces, all zipping through the
air at top speed.
BATTERY
A
battery to provide power to the onboard electronics after the missile’s release
from the launcher rail. While attached to the launcher rail, the missile is
powered by an umbilical cable.