China's Hypersonic Weapons Program: A Game-Changer?
By Harry J. Kazianis in the National Interest Magazine
A recent report in the Washington Free Beacon seems to shed new
light on China’s budding hypersonic weapons program:
“China’s military is working on a
jet-powered hypersonic cruise missile in addition to an advanced high-speed
glide warhead that was tested earlier this year.
A Chinese technical journal disclosed
new details of research on what China’s defense researchers are calling a
hypersonic cruise vehicle.
A line drawing of the scramjet-powered
vehicle shows that the concept being studied for eventual construction is
nearly identical to an experimental National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA) scramjet vehicle called the X-43.
Publication of details of work on the
powered hypersonic cruise vehicle indicates China is pursuing a second type of
ultra-fast maneuvering missile capable of traveling at speeds of up to Mach
10—nearly 8,000 miles per hour. Such speeds create huge technical challenges
for weapons designers because of the strain on materials and the difficulty of
control at high velocities.
Large numbers of Chinese military
writings in recent years have focused on hypersonic flight. However, few have
addressed scramjet powered hypersonic flight.”
It goes on to note:
"The Chinese report outlines in
technical detail how a scramjet-powered cruise vehicle operates at speeds
greater than Mach 5 and discusses how to integrate airframe design with
scramjet propulsion.
A scramjet is an engine that uses
supersonic airflow to compress and combust fuel, creating a highly efficient
propulsion system with few parts.
The report analyzed “preliminary design
methods for airframe/engine integrative configuration.”
The analysis “may serve as a basis for
quick preliminary design and performance evaluation of airframe/engine
integrative configuration” for a future Chinese hypersonic cruise vehicle, the
report said.
The scramjet cruise vehicle was
described in a technical military journal called Command Control &
Simulation. The article was published by the 716 Research Institute of the
state-run China Shipbuilding Industry Corp., China’s largest maker of warships,
submarines, and torpedoes."
I have been interested in such weapons
for a while now. Here is an interview I conducted on the subject back in March
(reposted with permission from the Lowy
Institute):
Harry Kazianis, Managing Editor of the
Washington, DC-based international affairs publication The National
Interest interviewed John Stillion, a Senior Fellow at the Center for
Strategic and Budgetary Assessments (CSBA).
Q: Please describe what exactly a
hypersonic weapon is, for our readers.
A: NASA defines the hypersonic regime
as speeds greater than Mach 5 but less than Mach 25. It further divides this
speed regime into two parts. One is the 'high-hypersonic' speed range between
Mach 10 and Mach 25. The other is the range between Mach 5 and Mach 10 referred
to simply as the hypersonic speed range (this is about 5300 to 10,600 kmh). The
latter is the speed regime where most of the recent discussion of hypersonic
weapons has been focused.
Ballistic missiles with ranges between
about 300 and 1000 km travel in this speed range, but they generally don't
travel long distances through the atmosphere at these speeds. Usually when
hypersonic weapons are discussed people are referring to machines that can
sustain flight in the Mach 5 to 10 speed range for a significant distance and
period of time measured in minutes. For perspective, the Concorde supersonic
transport cruised at Mach 2.
Q: What nations have the strongest
hypersonic weapons programs? How advanced is American technology in this
regard?
A: Press reports indicate there are
only three nations with hypersonic weapons programs: the US, Russia and China.
In November 2011 the US Army conducted
a successful test of the Advanced Hypersonic Weapon (AHW) demonstrator. This is
a hypersonic glide vehicle similar in concept to the reported Chinese system. A
hypersonic glide vehicle couples the high speeds of ballistic missiles with the
maneuverability of an aircraft. The goal of the AHW test was to collect data on
hypersonic glide vehicle technologies to inform possible future designs. The
test used a three-stage missile booster system to power the test vehicle to
hypersonic speed and evaluated its performance on a flight over the Pacific
Ocean.
A second US approach to hypersonic
weapons made a similar advance on 1 May 2013 when the US successfully tested
the Boeing X-51 hypersonic research vehicle (video above).
It is powered by a supersonic
combustion ramjet or 'scramjet' engine and flew about 306 km in three and a
half minutes at just over Mach 5. This was the first successful test of a
scramjet-powered vehicle. The scramjet is efficient at hypersonic speeds, but
as the name implies, the air flowing through the engine is traveling at
supersonic speed, so the fuel must be precisely measured, injected into the air
flow and ignited with extreme speed. Work on what eventually became the X-51
began in the early 1990s.
These successful tests indicate the US
is well along the path to solving many of the problems associated with
sustained hypersonic flight. These include the high drag and temperatures
generated by vehicles traveling at hypersonic speed and developing an efficient
powerplant.
Q: There have been reports that America is
considering building such weapons for deployment on submarines. How challenging
would this be and is it practical?
A: The X-51 had to be boosted to high
speed (Mach 4+) by a rocket before it could start its scramjet engine. So, any
weapon employing a similar propulsion system would probably initially be
launched like a missile. The US has been launching missiles from submarines for
decades and is familiar with, and has overcome, the technical challenges likely
to arise in that part of the development program. Alternatively, launching a
missile with an AHW-derived weapon might be equally feasible.
Q: China's various hypersonic glide vehicle tests
have garnered a lot of attention. How advanced might Beijing's hypersonic
program be compared to the US?
A: Not much is really known publicly
about the Chinese program. What has been reported indicates that their initial
investments might be focused on building vehicles that can replace the re-entry
vehicles usually carried by ballistic missiles. These 'hypersonic glide
vehicles', as the name implies, are carried by ballistic missiles, but once
they descend into the upper atmosphere, their shape gives them much greater
range and maneuverability than 'normal' cone-shaped re-entry vehicles. So,
based on press reports, the Chinese AHW programs might be characterized as
working to improve the capabilities of ballistic missiles while the X-51
program is focused on making weapons that behave more like very fast cruise
missiles.
Q: Many have stated Chinese hypersonic technology
could be used as a new form of anti-ship weapon like the DF-21D. Would you say
this is possible?
A: Again, based on press reports, the
DF-21D seems to rely on a maneuverable cone-shaped re-entry vehicle. Replacing
this with a hypersonic glide vehicle might give the existing weapon greater
ability to maneuver to attack targets and avoid defenses as well as greater range.
Q: How long would it take for such Chinese tests to
move towards a weaponized system?
A: Our track record in predicting when
new Chinese weapons will come on line is not very good. The DF-21D and J-20
stealth fighter both materialized more quickly than most outside observers
thought they would. If the Chinese tests are as far along as they seem to be
from press reports, it might be possible to see operational systems with this
technology in the field within a decade.
Q: Can US missile-defense platforms such as AEGIS
defend against such weapons? If not, what options would America have?
A: Defensive missiles have very limited
time and a finite amount of energy available to position themselves to
intercept an incoming offensive missile. Like most guided weapons they
constantly compute and re-compute the point in space where they will intercept
the incoming missile and fly toward that point. If the incoming missile is
truly a ballistic missile, then its trajectory is essentially fixed and the
interceptor will not need to maneuver much because the calculated intercept
point will be quite stable. However, if the incoming missile can maneuver, the
interceptor will need to maneuver as well. Given the high speeds and short
timelines involved, hypersonic glide vehicles have the potential to make
defensive missiles less effective than they might be against non-maneuvering
targets.
Options for bolstering defenses include
the electromagnetic railgun and directed-energy technologies currently under
development. Other possible countermeasures include using jammers or other
electronic countermeasure techniques to deny targeting data to the attacker or
to confuse the hypersonic glide vehicle's own sensors as it attempts to hit its
target. Disrupting communication links between sensing, command-and-control,
and missile units is another possible means of decreasing the effectiveness of
such weapons. Over the long run, developing long-range, survivable strike
systems that would allow our ships to operate beyond the effective reach of
weapons like the DF-21D may be the most robust defensive approach.
No comments:
Post a Comment