AGM-130
| AGM-130 | |
|---|---|
| Type | Air-to-surface guided missile | 
| Place of origin | United States | 
| Service history | |
| In service | 1994–2013 | 
| Used by | United States (USAF) | 
| Wars | Kosovo War | 
| Production history | |
| Unit cost | Approximately $450,000 per weapon | 
| Specifications | |
| Mass | 2,917 lb (1,323 kg) | 
| Length | 12 feet, 10.5 inches (3.90 meters) | 
| Diameter | 15 in/18 in (38 cm/46 cm) (bomb); 9 in (23 cm) (rocket motor) | 
| Wingspan | 59 in (150 cm) | 
| Warhead | 2,000 lb (907 kg) BLU-109 or MK 84 | 
| Operational range | 46.6 miles (75 kilometers) although exact range is classified | 
| Flight ceiling | 30,000-plus feet (9,100 meters) | 
| Maximum speed | High subsonic, but exact speed is classified | 
The AGM-130 was an air-to-ground guided missile developed by the United States of America. Developed in 1984, it is effectively a rocket-boosted version of the GBU-15 bomb. It first entered operational service on 11 January 1999, and was retired in 2013. 502 were produced.