Military Wiki
Advertisement

Question book-new

The factual accuracy of this article may be compromised due to out-of-date information


Below is a list of missiles, sorted alphabetically by name.

Other missile lists[]

Types of missiles:

Missiles by name[]

A[]

B[]

C[]

D[]

E[]

F[]

G[]

  • Gabriel missile (Ship-to-ship and air-to-ship variant
  • GAF Malkara
  • Ghauri-I (Pakistani)
  • Ghauri-II (Pakistani)
  • Ghauri-III
  • Global Rocket 1 fractional orbital bombardment system missile (Russia; Cold War) (NATO reporting name SS-X-10 Scrag)
  • Gorodomlya G-1 - Developed by a German team at Gorodomlya island (57°12'0.06"N, 33° 4'0.02"E) in 1948, based on the V-2 with detachable warhead and integral propellant tanks. (a.k.a. R-10).
  • Gorodomlya G-1M - The G-1 with a more powerful engine proposed in 1949.
  • Gorodomlya G-2 - (a.k.a. R-12) Developed as far as preliminary design the G-2 first stage was to have been powered by a cluster of three engines from the G-1 with a thrust of approx 100tons, the second stage being capable of delivering the warhead 2,000 to 2,500 kilometres. Insurmountable problems with control of the second stage forced abandonment.
  • Gorodomlya G-3 - The G-3 project was to have been a two-stage, G-1 derived rocket, with a winged upper stage similar to the A9 developed by Wernher Von Braun's team at Peenemünde, for a projected range of 8,000 to 10,000 kilometres
  • Gorodomlya G-4 - In April 1949 the Gorodomlya group were given the same requirements as the team at NII-88 (which produced the R-3). The German group designed a 24m (78 ft 9in) tall cone shaped rocket with an empty weight (including a three-ton warhead) of seven tons and a launch weight of 70.85 tons, (a.k.a. R-14).
  • Gorodomlya G-5 - Designed in parallel with the G-4, (a.k.a. R-15), another group at Gorodomlya proposed a ramjet powered unmanned bomber boosted by a G-1 or A4 rocket, cruising at 15 km (9 mi) altitude for a range of 3,000 kilometres.
  • Green Cheese (missile)
  • Green Flash (missile)
  • AGM-176 Griffin
  • Grom (missile)

H[]

I[]

J[]

K[]

L[]

M[]

N[]

O[]

P[]

Q[]

R[]

S[]

T[]

U[]

V[]

W[]

X[]

Y[]

Z[]

  • Zircon (missile)

See also[]

References[]

External links[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at List of missiles and the edit history here.
Advertisement