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Guidance System, Stellar-Inertial, Northrop "Snark"

Air and Space Museum

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    Object Details

    Manufacturer

    Northrop Aircraft Inc.

    Summary

    This is the guidance system from the Snark, an air-breathing, subsonic, unpiloted winged missile built by Northrop Aircraft in the 1950s. The system used a combination of inertial and stellar techniques to navigate from launch points in the United States to targets up to 8,000 km (5,000 miles) away. The inertial system guided the missile during launch. Once the missile achieved cruising altitude, the system locked onto a star and corrected any errors in its trajectory caused by drifting of the gyros or other factors. For the final dive to the target, the inertial system once again took over.
    The Snark was briefly deployed in the 1950s but was quickly replaced by ballistic missiles in the U.S. arsenal. The advances in stellar and interial navigation developed for the Snark were later used on other aircraft, most notably the SR-71 Blackbird.
    Donated by the Northrop Corporation to the Museum in 1970.

    Alternate Name

    Snark Guidance System

    Credit Line

    Gift of the Northrop Corporation

    Inventory Number

    A19700234000

    Restrictions & Rights

    Usage conditions apply

    Type

    INSTRUMENTS-Navigational

    Materials

    Metal parts, glass optics.

    Dimensions

    3-D: 73.7 x 101.6cm, 235kg (29 x 40 in., 518lb.)

    Country of Origin

    United States of America

    See more items in

    National Air and Space Museum Collection

    Location

    Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, VA

    Exhibit Station

    Rockets & Missiles

    Data Source

    National Air and Space Museum

    Metadata Usage

    Not determined

    Link to Original Record

    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/nv92430b60b-7c3d-47e9-8c47-3bab5cbdab6e

    Record ID

    nasm_A19700234000

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