Submarine.
Publié le 11/05/2013
Extrait du document
«
B Propulsion
Modern submarines use either diesel-electric or nuclear power to drive the sub's propeller and to provide internal electric power.
Diesel-electric power emerged as themost efficient propulsion system for submarines in the early 20th century, following unsuccessful attempts to use steam or gasoline power.
While on the surface, thesubmarine uses a diesel engine to drive the propeller and generate electricity.
When submerged, a battery-driven electrical motor takes over for propulsion and power.The diesel engine recharges the batteries.
Using the diesel engine requires air, however, and so a submarine has to surface and thus expose itself to attack.
Germanengineers solved this problem in the design of their World War II submarines, called U-boats.
They did so by developing the snorkel, a retractable tube that can beextended above the surface of the water while the submarine operates at periscope depth—about 18 m (60 ft) below the surface.
The snorkel provided the air to burnfuel in the diesel engine and vented off the exhaust fumes produced by the engine.
Using the snorkel gave a margin of safety for submarines as they recharged theirbatteries, and allowed submarines to extend their underwater range considerably.
The successful design in the early 1950s of a nuclear reactor small enough to fit inside a submarine hull was the most significant advance in submarine technology sincethe advent of diesel-electric propulsion a half-century earlier.
A U.S.
Navy team led by then-Captain Hyman G.
Rickover engineered the breakthrough.
Their successfollowed years of scientific speculation that a controlled nuclear fission reaction might be harnessed to power submarines.
The theory is as simple as the reactor designsare complex: A controlled nuclear reaction, which takes place within a pressure vessel, produces enormous heat energy.
This heat is channeled through a piping systemthat, in turn, heats water in a second, separate circuit of pipes.
The heated water turns to steam, which passes through a turbine to power the submarine's propulsiondrive.
The steam also provides internal electric power via a turbine-driven generator.
Because the nuclear reactor does not need access to fresh air, a modern nuclearsubmarine can cruise submerged for an unlimited amount of time.
During long stretches underwater, the vessel replenishes its supply of breathing oxygen throughhydrolysis, a chemical process that extracts oxygen from seawater.
C Surfacing and Diving
Submarines use a system of tanks that can be filled with and emptied of seawater to control the buoyancy of the warship.
These tanks, called ballast tanks, permitdiving and surfacing.
The modern submarine has an array of wrap-around ballast tanks surrounding the inner (or pressure) hull of the submarine, where the crew lives.The ballast tanks are filled with seawater to reduce buoyancy for the dive.
To surface, compressed air is ejected into the tanks, forcing out the ballast water andincreasing the ship’s buoyancy.
By varying the number of tanks that are filled with water, a submarine can run at different underwater depths.
Maneuvering underwater is accomplished by adjusting the ship's rudder and control planes.
These are short, hydraulically powered wing-shaped surfaces.
The rudder islocated at the rear of the sub near the propeller, and controls left and right movement.
Two sets of control planes are mounted near the rudder and at the forward endof the sub, either on the hull or bridge structure.
The control planes control upward and downward movement through water, and help the submarine surface and dive.World War II-era and later submarines have a separate set of controls for the stern (rear) planes and fairwater (forward) planes, but one person can also operate thesubmarine at a single station.
By flooding the ballast tanks with water and controlling the planes, the submarine can dive through the water to the desired depth.
Three factors govern how a modern submarine functions in underwater combat: its operating depth, sound silencing ability, and navigational capabilities.
A submarine’s operating depth is limited by the toughness of the pressure hull and penetrations for seawater intake pipes, torpedo tubes, and other openings.
WorldWar II-era submarines could only venture safely to a depth of about 120 m (about 400 ft), while modern nuclear submarines are believed to be able to descend safelyto depths in excess of 460 m (1500 ft)—the precise figures are highly classified.
D Silent Running
The primary means of locating an enemy submarine is through sonar ( SOund Navigation And Ranging).
A sonar system detects sounds produced by the sub's engines and by its passage through the water, or it detects the echo of sonar signals bounced off a target.
Submarines operating underwater avoid detection by silencing thesounds they make.
The basic hull and propulsion systems of a modern submarine are specially designed to minimize noise.
Some submarines have special rubberizedcoatings or tiles affixed to the exterior hull to absorb enemy sonar signals.
Other subs mount their machinery or other noise-making equipment on flexible rubberizedbaffles to prevent the sound vibrations from being transmitted through the hull.
Another technique for avoiding detection is to hide the submarine in pockets of colderseawater, which form an acoustic layer that sonar waves can not penetrate.
E Navigation and Communication
Modern submariners have much better navigational tools than their earlier counterparts.
During World War II, submarines, as well as other ships and aircraft, beganusing radio signals beamed from ground stations to calculate their approximate location.
(To learn how such radio navigation works, see Loran).
Until the 1960s, however, submarine navigators still used handheld sextants to plot their positions by the stars.
Missile submarines in the 1960s and 1970s began using mechanical deadreckoning calculators and charts of the known landscape features on the ocean floor to chart their locations.
Dead reckoning calculators use a previous position, thesubmarine’s speed and direction, and the time traveled to calculate position.
Because they did not take currents or variations in speed into account, these were alsorelatively inaccurate.
Powerful digital computers and sophisticated gyrocompasses (gyroscopes used as compasses for direction-finding) now help submarines navigate.Submarines also use the Global Positioning System satellite network, which provides navigational accuracy measured in meters as opposed to kilometers.
See also Navigation.
Submarine communications remain limited today more by tactical necessity and the need for stealth than by limits in modern communications capabilities.
Submarineshave retractable antennas for receiving and transmitting radio messages, although on most missions the submarines operate on electronic silence, merely copyingincoming messages broadcast by satellites.
Also, both missile and attack submarines in the U.S.
Navy can receive messages via very low frequency radio waves, whichcan be picked up by a trailing wire antenna while they operate submerged.
F Life on a Submarine
The quality of life for submariners at sea has improved along with technological improvements such as larger hulls, cleaner propulsion systems, and increased internalelectricity and water.
Submarines of the 1920-1945 era were cramped and poorly-ventilated, subjecting sailors to occasional belches of diesel exhaust.
Sailors rarelychanged clothes and showered only occasionally due to the scarcity of water.
They shared bunks with other sailors due to space shortages, and lived on canned fooddue to limited galley facilities.
While the inside of a submarine remains a cramped, equipment-studded cylinder, modern sub crews enjoy air conditioning, a variety ofmeals (thanks to refrigerators and freeze-dried foods), and recreational diversions, such as personal computers, videotape machines, and even compact exerciseequipment.
Larger missile submarines have even more features: The Trident missile submarines have an unofficial jogging track on one deck on the outside of the arrayof missile tubes, and the Russian Typhoon submarine features a miniature greenhouse with flowers and a small swimming pool for its crewmen.
Nevertheless, all naviescarefully screen recruits for their submarine services to ensure that the sailors can withstand the psychological and physical pressures of inhabiting a closed.
»
↓↓↓ APERÇU DU DOCUMENT ↓↓↓