India Successfully Tests Advanced Agni
Missile Equipped with MIRV Capability
India has successfully conducted the flight test of an
advanced Agni missile equipped with Multiple Independently Targetable Re-entry
Vehicle (MIRV) technology from Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam Island. The successful test
marks a major milestone in strengthening India’s strategic deterrence
capability and indigenous defence technology.
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The Advanced Agni missile
was tested with multiple payloads capable of striking different targets spread
across a large geographical area in the Indian Ocean Region.
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The missile trajectory
and payload impacts were monitored through telemetry and tracking systems
operated by multiple ground-based and ship-based stations.
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Flight data confirmed
that all mission objectives were successfully achieved during the trial, demonstrating
the missile system’s operational reliability and precision.
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The missile system was
developed by Defence Research and Development Organisation with support from
Indian industries, and the trial was witnessed by senior DRDO scientists and
personnel of the Indian Army
Multiple Independently Targetable Re-entry
Vehicle (MIRV) Technology
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MIRV technology enables a
single ballistic missile to carry and deliver multiple warheads against
different targets independently.
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Unlike traditional
ballistic missiles that carry a single warhead, MIRV-equipped missiles can
deploy several warheads from one missile system.
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The warheads are released
at different speeds and trajectories during the final phase of flight, allowing
them to strike spatially separated targets.
MIRV Work
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After the missile
completes its powered flight, the missile bus releases multiple re-entry
vehicles (RVs) sequentially.
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These re-entry vehicles
independently re-enter the atmosphere and move towards separate designated
targets.
The major components of a MIRV system
include
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Missile Bus: Carries the
warheads and guidance systems during launch and mid-course flight.
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Re-entry Vehicles (RVs):
Individual warheads designed to survive atmospheric re-entry and strike
different targets.
Global Development of MIRV Technology
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The United States first
deployed MIRVed Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs) in 1970, followed
by the Soviet Union during the 1970s.
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Countries such as the
United States, Russia, China, the United Kingdom, and France possess MIRV
capabilities.
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India successfully
carried out its first flight-test of a MIRVed Agni-5 missile in March 2024 and
further advanced the capability through the successful trial of the Advanced
Agni missile.
Significance of MIRV Technology
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MIRV technology
significantly enhances the strategic and destructive capability of a missile
system by enabling multiple-target engagement through a single launch.
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Compared to Multiple
Re-entry Vehicle (MRV) systems, MIRV offers the added advantage of independent
targeting capability.
¨ The development of MIRV systems is technologically complex as it requires large missiles, miniaturised warheads, accurate guidance systems, and sophisticated sequential warhead-release mechanisms.
¨ MIRV-equipped missiles are also considered effective countermeasures against Ballistic Missile Defence (BMD) systems because multiple warheads are harder to intercept simultaneously.