The class is equipped with the
Aegis Weapon System (AWS). The system version was Baseline 4 for name-ship through the third ship, and Baseline 5 for fourth ships immediately after they were put into service; then all ships were updated to Baseline 5.3 with modernization. The class uses the
AN/SPY-1D as the main radar. As
surface-to-air missiles, the
SM-2MR Block IIIA was initially used, and later the Block IIIB came into use. Since the mid-2000s, they have also been equipped with a
missile defense capability with the primary intention of countering
North Korean
ballistic missiles, and now have an
Aegis BMD 3.6 system installed to launch SM-3 Block IA and IB missiles. The
Mark 41 Vertical Launching System arrangement, similar to the
Arleigh Burke class, consisted of 29 cells on the foredeck and 61 cells on the
afterdeck. These cells contain not only RIM-162, SM-2, and SM-3, but also
VL-ASROCs. In addition, they are equipped with HOS-302, one of the Japanese variant of the
Mark 32 Surface Vessel Torpedo Tubes, as
anti-submarine weapons and
Harpoon as anti-ship missiles. And as gunnery weapons, an
Oto Melara /54 caliber gun and two Mark 15 20 mm
CIWS gun mounts are installed. Most of electronic devices outside of AWS originated in Japan. For
electronic warfare, this class is equipped with NOLQ-2, an elaborate system capable of both
ES and
EA. The OQS-102 sonar is equivalent to the U.S. SQS-53C.
Flight tests for Aegis BMD systems In December 2007, Japan conducted a successful test of the SM-3 block IA against a ballistic missile aboard . This was the first time a Japanese ship was selected to launch the interceptor missile during a test of the
Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense System. In previous tests, they provided tracking and communications. Afterward, Japan has also undertaken another two successful Ballistic Missile Defense tests aboard in October 2009 and aboard in October 2010, while one test aboard in November 2008 failed to intercept the target. == Names ==