October 13, 2008

Missilethreat.com

Home :: Missiles of the World

Print This

Prithvi-3

Country:  India
Alternate Name:  P-3
Class:  SRBM
Basing:  Road mobile
Length:  8.56 m
Diameter:  1.0 m
Launch Weight:  5600 kg
Payload:  Single warhead, 500 to 1000 kg
Warhead:  Probably HE, nuclear
Propulsion:  2-stage solid
Range:  300 km
Status:  Development

Details

The Prithvi-3 is a short-range, road mobile, solid-propellant ballistic missile. During the development of the Prithvi-3 in the early 1990s a liquid-propellant model was created;that project is believed to be terminated. This model is a departure from propulsion system of the Prithvi-1 and Prithvi-2. The longest-ranged member of the Prithvi family of missiles, it was most likely designed for use as a tactical weapon against Pakistan and China.


Sources indicate that the Prithvi-3 has a range of 300 km and an impressive accuracy of 25 m CEP. It is fueled by a two-stage solid-propellant. The missile has a 500 to 1000 kg payload, with a 10 to 20 kT nuclear warhead. It is also reported that the Prithvi-3 has 4 fixed tail fins and uses four control fins near the nose of the missile in order to maneuver within the lower atmosphere. Its range and payload are not sufficient to be used against strategic targets, although its high accuracy and mobility are ideal for use against military targets.1


The solid-propellant version of the Prithvi-3 was first tested in January 2004 with a second test in October 2004. In October the missile was launched from the Interim Test Range at Balasore, and was tracked by several ground stations including down-range stations. The missile flew what the Indian Ministry of Defense described as a "perfect trajectory, as per design projections." In May 2005 reports suggest that the system was also tested from underwater launchers with some success. Reports suggest the possibility of both land and sea-based Prithvi-3 missiles. 2 A contract was signed with Bharat Dynamics for a more extensive order of this weapon system, following this test. Thirty missiles were ordered in 2004 followed by an additional 54 in 2006.3 As of 2006, Prithvi-3 was not fully operational and unable to be deployed. 4



Reports suggest that there is a similarity between this project and the Dhanush missile system. The similarities between the two systems suggest the possibility of identical projects. They both share a common launch system. Although the Dhanush is more ambiguous, the two systems seem to have the same projected range approximations. P-3 is projected to have a two stage solid propulsion system, and the Dhanush is thought to be expanded into a two stage liquid and solid propulsion weapon. The two weapons are both suggested to have sea-based platforms, and eventually move to a land based counterpart. Dhanush's capability of carrying a nuclear payload is questionable and other comparable attributes are uncertain, but the systems are suggested to be similar.5




Footnotes

  1. Duncan Lennox, ed., Jane's Strategic Weapons Systems 42 (Surrey: Jane's Information Group, January 2005), 85-87; GlobalSecurity.org, "Prithvi," available at http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/india/prithvi.htm, accessed on 5 June 2008.
  2. "India Tests Prithvi III and Dhanush," Jane's Missiles and Rockets, 1 December 2004.
  3. Duncan Lennox, ed., Jane's Strategic Weapons Systems 46 (Surrey: Jane's Information Group, January 2007), 53-56.
  4. Martin Sieff, "BMD Focus: India's Giant Leap Forward." UPI Online , 1 December 2006. http://www.upi.com/, Accessed on 5 June 2008.
  5. Lennox Volume 46, Page 56

India Tests Underwater-Launched Missile

October 27, 2004 :: News

India today tested a naval variant of a nuclear capable ballistic missile with a range of 300km. The missile tested has been identified by news sources as a “Prithvi III,” and is said to be the longest range Prithvi tested thus far.
        The missile’s characteristics, however, seem to indicate that it is more likely the missile known as the Dhanush, which itself had been derived from the Prithvi II. The missile launched today is said to have previously been launched from a ship, which is also true of the Dhanush.
        The missile is also said to have the capability to be launched from a submarine. Today’s launch reportedly took place from a specially constructed underwater platform and canister, from the Integrated Test Range at Chandipur, in the eastern coast state of Orissa, some 230km from the city of Bhubaneswar. The missile landed in the Bay of Bengal.
        Indian and Western news services variously report that the missile consists of a single stage, and the missile reportedly has a length of 8.5 meters (28 ft) and a diameter of 1 meter. While it is capable of carrying a nuclear warhead—described by some reports as “sub kiloton”—it may also carry incendiary or fragmentary munitions. Each of these dimensions and capabilities roughly correspond to those previously assigned to the Dhanush missile. The dimensions of the missile called the “Prithvi III” are not known. The missile may indeed never have been completed.
        It would appear that India may have applied the signification Prithvi III to the missile previously termed Dhanush, or that the news reports are simply inaccurate.
        That the missile tested is in fact the Dhanush is also suggested by an October 9 report by India’s The Statesman, that such a test was planned. (Link) 

Home :: Missiles of the World

 

Powered by eResources.com