ASM-16 Cetán

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ASM-16 Cetán
ASM16.jpg
3D render of the ASM-16
TypeAnti-Ship Missile (AShM)
Place of origin Inyursta
Service history
In service2016-present
Used byInyursta Inyurstan Air Force
Production history
DesignerNavayelle Systems
Designed2012
ManufacturerNavayelle Systems
Produced2016-present
Specifications
Weight5,480kg
Length11.2m
Diameter78cm
Detonation
mechanism
Impact
Blast yield640kg Multiple-EFP Warhead

EngineLiquid Fuel Rocket
Wingspan1.62m
Operational
range
720km
Flight ceiling25km
SpeedMach 4.7
Guidance
system
GPS/SACTOSAT with terminal active radar homing
Accuracy~10m CEP

The ASM-16 Cetán, previously known as the ASM-1M3X, is a long-range anti-ship missile in service with the Inyurstan Air Force. Along with the SS-9D Yacún-Borão, it is one of two high-altitude, high-speed missiles dubbed "carrier-killers" in the Inyurstan arsenal.

It is named for the Cetán, a gruesome heavyweight sea monster of Inyurstan lore.

Development

In 2012, Navayelle Systems Inc. was contracted to revive the earlier ASM-1 project. With a renewed understanding of high-supersonic flight dynamics and improved rocket engineering capabilities, the ASM-16 program was successful and entered service with a speed significantly higher and range almost twice that of its forefather.

Weighing on the decision to revive the idea of a high-altitude, high-speed, high-impact anti-ship missile was the fact of subsequent upgrades and improvements on the BM-37E2 Pythón supersonic bomber and fighter-screen capabilities which increased the survivability of a high-altitude attack on an enemy carrier group.

Capabilities

An increased service ceiling allows the missile to complicate (if not outright bypass) the interception by most air-defense systems until it's terminal descent at Mach 4.7. Pseudo-random maneuvering until it's terminal phase also mitigate the use of high-altitude anti-ballistic missile defenses against the Cetán.

As a "carrier-killer", the 640kg warhead is designed to explode on impact, sending multiple large-diameter EFP metal jet streams expanding outward into the ship below decks. While the warhead could ideally sink even a super-carrier in a single hit, the effect of such a blast is likely to destroy vital systems, cause secondary internal fires and paralyze operations in the off-chance the target ship somehow survives.

Speed, RCS returns and flight pattern can be sucessfully mimicked by the DU-109 target drone.