Warhead

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A B61 nuclear bomb in various stages of assembly; the nuclear warhead is the bullet-shaped silver canister in the middle-left of the photograph. B-61 bomb (DOE).jpg
A B61 nuclear bomb in various stages of assembly; the nuclear warhead is the bullet-shaped silver canister in the middle-left of the photograph.

A warhead is the forward section of a device that contains the explosive agent or toxic (biological, chemical, or nuclear) material that is delivered by a missile, rocket, torpedo, or bomb.

Contents

Classification

Types of warheads include:

Often, a biological or chemical warhead will use an explosive charge for rapid dispersal.

Detonators

Explosive warheads contain detonators to trigger the explosion.

Types of detonators include:

TypeDefinition
ContactWhen the warhead makes physical contact with the target, the explosive is detonated. Sometimes combined with a delay, to detonate a specific amount of time after contact.
Proximity Using radar, sonar, a magnetic sensor, or a laser, the warhead is detonated when the target is within a specified distance. It is often coupled with directional explosion control system that ensures that the explosion sends the fragmentation primarily towards the target that triggered it.
TimedWarhead is detonated after a specific amount of time.
AltitudeWarhead is detonated once it falls to a specified altitude, usually in an air burst.
RemoteRemotely detonated via signal from operator. (Not normally used for warheads except for self-destruction)
CombinedAny combination of the above.

See also

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References

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