India successfully demonstrated its Inter-Continental Ballistic Missile (ICBM) capability by launching its most powerful and longest range missile, Agni-V, from the Wheeler Island off the Odisha(Orissa) coast.
The 17-metre-long surface-to-surface ballistic missile lifted off
majestically from a rail mobile launcher at 8.04 a.m. After a flight
time of 20 minutes, the missile re-entry vehicle impacted the per-designated target point more than 5,000 km away in the Indian Ocean
with a high degree of accuracy.
V. K. Sarawat who is Scientific Adviser to the Defence Minister told that with that missile launch, India has
emerged as a major missile power. It has joined a select group of
countries possessing technology to design, develop, build and
manufacture long range missiles of this class and technological
complexity.”
It was a flawless flight and the three stages jettisoned on time. The
third stage fired the re-entry vehicle into the atmosphere at perfect
angle at an altitude of 100 kms. The pay load withstood the searing
temperatures of around 3000 degree Celsius.
This is the first time India has test fired a three-stage, all
solid-fuelled missile. Many new technologies including the state of art
navigation system and carbon composite rocket motor casings were tested
in the missile. All the radar telemetry and electro optical stations
along the coast besides three ships tracked the flight trajectory of the
missile and final terminal event at the impact point.
The fireball that erupted when the dummy payload hit the waters of the
Indian Ocean was recorded by the cameras on board the ships stationed
around the impact point. The missile weighed 50 tonnes and is capable of
carrying a nuclear war head weighing 1.1 tonne.
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