Are seeker missiles good?

Seeker missiles travel more slowly and inflict less damage than dumbfire missiles, and are most effective against the unshielded hulls of ships.

What are seeker missiles?

Seeker missiles were guided projectiles similar to concussion missiles, although were compact enough to be fired from conventional light weapons. Seeker missiles were infrared-guided, and were packed with enough detonite to obliterate the strongest of personal shielding.

How does missile seeker work?

An IR seeker works by using a sensor to search for IR radiation emitted and reflected by potential targets. Early seekers were ‘hot-spot trackers’ (typically focusing on jet exhausts). However, the present generation of imaging IR seekers uses an array to build an IR image of the target.

What does thermal Cascade do?

Thermal Cascade is an Experimental Effect that can be applied to a weapon through Engineering. It consists of experimental munitions that interact with shields upon detonation, generating significant heat on the target.

Can missile change direction?

The flight fins themselves, which steer the missiles through the air — just like the flaps on an airplane wing, the moving flight fins generate drag (increase wind resistance) on one side of the missile, causing it to turn in that direction.

How does a Seeker Missile work and how does it work?

Many objects such as people, vehicle engines and aircraft generate and emit heat, and as such, are especially visible in the infrared wavelengths of light compared to objects in the background. Infrared seekers are passive devices, which, unlike radar, provide no indication that they are tracking a target.

How are flares used in infrared homing missiles?

They are, however, subject to a number of simple countermeasures, most notably dropping flares behind the target to provide false heat sources. This only works if the pilot is aware of the missile and deploys the countermeasures, and the sophistication of modern seekers has rendered them increasingly ineffective.

What is the infrared sensor on the tip of a missile?

The latest examples from the 1990s and on have the ability to attack targets out of their field of view (FOV) behind them and even to pick out vehicles on the ground. The infrared sensor package on the tip or head of a heat-seeking missile is known as the seeker head.

Why are they still making the Tomahawk missile?

But there are good reasons to keep producing the Tomahawk, even with its slower speeds. “The benefit of the sub-sonic missile is range,” Clark said. “Being sub-sonic means its also able to travel at a more fuel-efficient speed.

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