Multiple Launch Rocket System

A Multiple Launch Rocket System (MLRS) is a form of rocket artillery that can be reused. There are several systems in used today that fit this description in use by different armies. Some are given this name explicitly. The most famous system is the Katyusha rocket launcher used by the Soviet Union during the World War II and by its allies during the Cold War. This was a simple system with low accuracy in which the launchers were mounted on the back of a truck. Modern systems are often mounted on armoured, tracked vehicles, have a range of tens of kilometers and may be guided for accuracy. The U.S. Army's M270 MLRS is widely considered to be the most advanced system, and is also in service with several other nations.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
pilates
world climate report
latent homosexuality
servlet container
cominform
uss bass (ss 164)
uss cachalot (ss 170)
uss cuttlefish (ss 171)
energy bar
warmonger
transparency in graphic files
respiration (physiology)
cat's cradle (string game)
transshipment
florida group
robert balling
kappa alpha theta
john marshall harlan
common bean
british comics
psion 5
bypassing
gagarin (town)
george dalgarno
helvetic republic
c4 carbon fixation
prentis cobb hale
peace center
juan jos ibarretxe
john taylor (1503 1554)
theodore bikel
danielle harris
the superjesus
loganair
archosaur
ryotaro shiba
photorespiration
presbyopia
jacob's ladder (movie)
ernesto geisel
spiritual plane
jacob's ladder
hans ulrich rudel
estelle axton