53T6
| 53T6 (ABM-3 Gazelle) | |
|---|---|
| Type | Anti-ballistic missile | 
| Place of origin | Soviet Union | 
| Service history | |
| In service | Since 1995 | 
| Used by | Russia | 
| Wars | Cold War | 
| Production history | |
| Designer | NPO Novator Design Bureau | 
| Designed | 1978 | 
| Produced | 1988 | 
| No. built | 68 | 
| Variants | A modernized variant is in service as of July 2018 | 
| Specifications | |
| Mass | 10,000 kg (22,000 lbs) | 
| Length | 12 m | 
| Diameter | 1.8 m | 
| Warhead | nuclear 10 kt | 
| Engine | 2-stage solid fuel | 
| Operational range | 80–100 km | 
| Flight ceiling | 80–100 km | 
| Maximum speed | Mach 17 (20,800 km/h; 12,900 mph) | 
| Launch platform | silo | 
The 53T6 (NATO reporting name: ABM-3 Gazelle, previously SH-08) is a USSR anti-ballistic missile. Designed in 1978 and in service since 1995, it is a component of the A-135 anti-ballistic missile system.
The missile is able to intercept incoming re-entry vehicles at a distance of 80 km. The 53T6 is a two-stage solid-propellant rocket armed with a 10 kt thermonuclear weapon. (note: This is a neutron bomb that partially fissions the radioactive materials in the RV and prevents detonation of the hydrogen explosive. A neutron bomb is an enhanced fission implosion trigger that encounters a neutron emitter and is not correctly described as thermonuclear while the incoming hydrogen bomb it disables is a thermonuclear weapon.) The missile is about 10 meters in length and 1.8 meters in diameter. Its launch weight is 10 tons.
The 53T6 missile is kept in a silo-based launch container. Prior to launch its cover is blown off.
The missile achieves speeds of approximately Mach 17 (20,800 km/h; 12,900 mph; 5.78 km/s). The engine has very high specific impulse, enabling acceleration from rest to Mach 16 within 3-4 seconds. Maximal load manoeuvre capability is 210 g longitudinal and 90 g transverse.