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M51 (missile)
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M51 (missile)
The M51 SLBM is a French submarine-launched ballistic missile, built by ArianeGroup, and deployed with the French Navy. Designed to replace the M45 SLBM (in French terminology the MSBS – Mer-Sol-Balistique-Stratégique "Sea-ground-Strategic ballistic"), it was first deployed in 2010.
Each missile carries six to ten independently targetable TN 75 thermonuclear warheads.
The three-stage engine of the M51 is directly derived from the solid propellant boosters of Ariane 5. Like other blunt-nosed SLBM examples, such as the Trident D5, the M51 uses an extensible aerospike in the nose.
The missiles are a compromise over the M5 SLBM design, which was to have a range of 11,000 km (6,800 mi) and carry ten new-generation tête nucléaire océanique ("oceanic nuclear warhead") MIRVs. Design work on the M5 started in the late 1980s by Aérospatiale, before the programme was renamed the M51 in 1996, when development costs decreased by 20 percent. The M51 entered service in 2010.
After having spent €5 billion ($6.7 billion) developing the missile, the French government placed a €3 billion ($3.9 billion) order with EADS SPACE Transportation for the M51 in December 2004. The contract covered serial production of the M51 for ten years, with the company to be responsible for sustained readiness support throughout the missile's life.
In 2014 Airbus signed a deal with the French government for development work on an upgrade designated M51.3 to equip the new ballistic missile submarines of the French Navy, SNLE 3G. On 10 May 2016 Airbus and Safran signed a joint joint partnership to develop the M51.3 upgrade intended to enter service around 2025.
M51.4: On August 28, 2025, the French Armaments Agency (DGA) awarded ArianeGroup the contract for the development and production of the fourth version (M51.4) of the M51 strategic ballistic missile.
The M51 performed its first flight test (unarmed) on 9 November 2006 from the French missile flight test centre in Biscarrosse (Landes). The target was reached twenty minutes later, in the north-west of the Atlantic Ocean. A second and third successful test were carried out on 21 June 2007 and 13 November 2008.
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M51 (missile)
The M51 SLBM is a French submarine-launched ballistic missile, built by ArianeGroup, and deployed with the French Navy. Designed to replace the M45 SLBM (in French terminology the MSBS – Mer-Sol-Balistique-Stratégique "Sea-ground-Strategic ballistic"), it was first deployed in 2010.
Each missile carries six to ten independently targetable TN 75 thermonuclear warheads.
The three-stage engine of the M51 is directly derived from the solid propellant boosters of Ariane 5. Like other blunt-nosed SLBM examples, such as the Trident D5, the M51 uses an extensible aerospike in the nose.
The missiles are a compromise over the M5 SLBM design, which was to have a range of 11,000 km (6,800 mi) and carry ten new-generation tête nucléaire océanique ("oceanic nuclear warhead") MIRVs. Design work on the M5 started in the late 1980s by Aérospatiale, before the programme was renamed the M51 in 1996, when development costs decreased by 20 percent. The M51 entered service in 2010.
After having spent €5 billion ($6.7 billion) developing the missile, the French government placed a €3 billion ($3.9 billion) order with EADS SPACE Transportation for the M51 in December 2004. The contract covered serial production of the M51 for ten years, with the company to be responsible for sustained readiness support throughout the missile's life.
In 2014 Airbus signed a deal with the French government for development work on an upgrade designated M51.3 to equip the new ballistic missile submarines of the French Navy, SNLE 3G. On 10 May 2016 Airbus and Safran signed a joint joint partnership to develop the M51.3 upgrade intended to enter service around 2025.
M51.4: On August 28, 2025, the French Armaments Agency (DGA) awarded ArianeGroup the contract for the development and production of the fourth version (M51.4) of the M51 strategic ballistic missile.
The M51 performed its first flight test (unarmed) on 9 November 2006 from the French missile flight test centre in Biscarrosse (Landes). The target was reached twenty minutes later, in the north-west of the Atlantic Ocean. A second and third successful test were carried out on 21 June 2007 and 13 November 2008.