Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Technology Hardware

Sonic Torpedo Defense 567

dylanduck writes "How do you defend a ship against torpedoes? According to the US Navy, you line the hull with loudspeakers and blast the incoming missile with such a devastating blast of sounds that it explodes." When asked about the possible ecological effects on marine life the military had no comment.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Sonic Torpedo Defense

Comments Filter:
  • by JudgeFurious ( 455868 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @08:06PM (#13760543)
    "This one goes to 11"
    • But... Why not just make the current anti-torpedo defense systems louder?
      • Why not just make the current anti-torpedo defense systems louder

        Maybe you'd have to pay an extra volume-license fee?

    • by beefypirate ( 916189 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @08:27PM (#13760713)
      Exploding drummers weren't included in the final test data.
    • by Stripe7 ( 571267 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @08:34PM (#13760757)
      Does it work in the lab, possibly. Does it work in deployment? Hooked up to a ship that has been out of port for 8 months, corrosion barnacles etc.. will it work at that time? Pretty much do not care about ecological effects, those are mitigated by the far more disastrous effects of a damaged/destroyed ship. What concerns me is the cost of deploying a high maintenance system that becomes ineffective when deployed for long durations.
      • Hooked up to a ship that has been out of port for 8 months, corrosion barnacles etc

        Do the speakers need to be outside the hull? Doesn't the metal hull conduct sound well enough that the speakers can be inside the hull of the vessel - and wouldn't keeping them in a protected environment mitigate some of the worries about corrosion and barnacles?

      • by Anonymous Luddite ( 808273 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @09:55PM (#13761172)
        >> barnacles etc..

        Doesn't the U.S. Navy paint all its' hulls with a really nasty paint to kill off/prevent encrustation? If my faded memory serves it was a cost saver - smooth hulls require less power to go the same speed...

        • by flawedgeek ( 833708 ) <karldnorman.gmail@com> on Monday October 10, 2005 @10:28PM (#13761338)
          Just about anyone with a relatively big boat has to repaint the hull with antifoul paint every couple years. Not really that nasty, now, it's simply marine paint mixed with a bunch of (correct me if i'm wrong) aluminium dust. The older stuff used primarily copper, which had a few adverse effects on sea life.

          Apparently some of the Cajuns down south use cayenne pepper, and they claim it works the best, but hey, to a cajun, cayenne pepper's good for damn near anything.

          The navy these days has actually been using some pretty wierd coatings for ships, although mainly subs, in order to reduce friction.
    • to be more precise, it goes to 10.99999999...

  • marine life? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 10, 2005 @08:07PM (#13760550)
    When asked about the possible ecological effects on marine life the military had no comment.

    We care... why? My guess is that a large sonic blast is going to be a lot less harmful than a torpedo detonating. But that's just me.
    • Re:marine life? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by nurb432 ( 527695 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @08:09PM (#13760574) Homepage Journal
      Except in this case you get both.. ( even the summary stated this ).

      But, its once again a trade off.. Man or Animal.

      War isnt always fair.
      • Re:marine life? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by ScentCone ( 795499 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @08:19PM (#13760649)
        Except in this case you get both.. ( even the summary stated this ).

        Sure, but when you do get both, what you don't get is a giant ship sinking, spilling fuel oil or nuclear waste, weapons (er, and potentially thousands of lives) into the ocean. An economical, strategic, tactical, and ecological bargain.
        • We care because it sounds like there are still some kind of troubling unknowns? What is the range to be harmful to marine life? This is probably a lot more powerful than sonar, and they already have evidence that that causes problems in whales... I mean, we're talking about a sound wave powerful enough to detonate a torpedo. So maybe the torpedo-detonation range is merely a couple-hundred meters. But how far is the "really mess up sea-life" range? And how much testing is it going to take?

          What if every
        • Re:marine life? (Score:5, Insightful)

          by helix_r ( 134185 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @08:46PM (#13760828)

          For every time that particular countermeasure is used in combat, it will have been used thousands upon thousands of times in open water testing and war gaming. That really could have an adverse effect on wild life.

          It would be very irresponsible to develop this weapon without clear data on what effect it has on wildlife.
          • Not even close... (Score:5, Informative)

            by DnemoniX ( 31461 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @09:51PM (#13761157)
            I am a former sailor in the US Navy, my particular job was working with the Aegis weapon systems. Just because the system is installed on board doesn't imply that it gets used during a simulation or exercise. We have missiles and guns but very rarely ever fire a live round during training. We have electronic counter measures but those do not get set off either. Why waste the equipment and materials if they can be simulated via computer instead? But then how do you know the stuff works? Every bit of equipment has a planned maintenance schedule that is closely followed. This includes tests based daily, weekly, monthly, yearly etc. They are also very aware of the potential dangers, more so than you that is clear. The Navy is very careful about operating withing specific guidelines when it comes to the environment, they observe all of the whale habitats along the US costal waters and any other environmentaly sensative areas.
          • Re:marine life? (Score:5, Insightful)

            by raddan ( 519638 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @09:52PM (#13761159)
            It would be very irresponsible to develop this weapon without clear data on what effect it has on wildlife.

            That's silly. What if we have data that says that our potential weapon obliterates wildlife? Should we toss the idea and move on? Let's look at what we have now: Nuclear weapons obliterate wildlife. Fair enough, nuclear weapons are grossly indiscriminate; toss 'em. Conventional explosives obliterate wildlife. Ok, toss those too. Artillery isn't very green, either. In fact, machine guns aren't particularly enviro-friendly. Get rid of 'em. And let's just forget about a whole platoon of soldiers tramping through the forest, crushing wildlife, shooting guns, and throwing grenades.

            I guess we don't have many options left, do we?

            I'm most certainly not a big supporter of war. It's fair to say that I am probably a bit of a peace-nik, and rather left-leaning. I'd say I'm rather environmentally-conscious, too; I hang my clothes to dry, my house is full of compact fluorescents, I try to avoid meat and eat a diet that consists primarily of organically-grown vegetables, fruits, and legumes, etc, etc, etc.

            But war is a tradeoff. We survive. We harm the environment.

            Don't get me wrong. Environmental damage is regrettable, and hopefully avoidable. But despite the fact that our politicians love to cry wolf, I do believe that malice really exists in the world. Sure, we haven't waged a legitimate (aka, just) war in 50 years. But we need to make sure we're prepared for that. If there's one thing that humans are good it, it's killing each other.

            • Re:marine life? (Score:3, Interesting)

              by Bastian ( 66383 )
              That's silly. What if we have data that says that our potential weapon obliterates wildlife? Should we toss the idea and move on? Let's look at what we have now: Nuclear weapons obliterate wildlife. Fair enough, nuclear weapons are grossly indiscriminate; toss 'em. Conventional explosives obliterate wildlife. Ok, toss those too. Artillery isn't very green, either. In fact, machine guns aren't particularly enviro-friendly. Get rid of 'em. And let's just forget about a whole platoon of soldiers tramping throu
              • Re:marine life? (Score:3, Insightful)

                by Stickerboy ( 61554 )
                >>That's silly. What if we have data that says that our potential weapon obliterates wildlife? Should we toss the idea and move on? Let's look at what we have now: Nuclear weapons obliterate wildlife. Fair enough, nuclear weapons are grossly indiscriminate; toss 'em. Conventional explosives obliterate wildlife. Ok, toss those too. Artillery isn't very green, either. In fact, machine guns aren't particularly enviro-friendly. Get rid of 'em. And let's just forget about a whole platoon of soldiers trampi
          • Re:marine life? (Score:3, Insightful)

            by DaltonRS ( 825261 )
            [sacasm]

            Let us reiterate.

            On one side we have "Oh no, what about the whales?! It's bad enough the military(hereafter to be referred to a baby-killers) exists in the first place, but now you are harming natures own creatures! There must be some way to make the death of every dolphin and whale the fault of Bush, his cronies, and all his baby-killers."

            And on the side where the common sense resides we have this; "Hmm, while it may be harmful to aquatic life, there is no way it is more harmful than sin
          • Re:marine life? (Score:5, Informative)

            by FredThompson ( 183335 ) <fredthompson&mindspring,com> on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @12:44AM (#13762244)
            Bullshit.

            I'm a former ICBM launch officer. I've participated in numerous exercises and tests. Did I ever actually launch an ICBM? No. Have we ever actually launched active nuclear ICBMs? No. Does that mean they aren't tested or are unreliable? No.

            War games, tests and simulations are just that, simulations. Equipment is tested without actually using it in an offensive manner. Critical environment equipment, military or civilian, is not tested "thousands upon thousands" of times in an active situation to prove it works.

            Were "thousands upon thousands" of artificial hears and pacemakers "tested" inside people to see if they would function properly? Nope.

            In my 3 years as a launch officer I never launched an actual missile but I sure ran a lot of test and simulations, multiple times per month. So did every other launch officer I knew, probably 150 people over that period. None of the solid-fuel ICBMs have been launched other than those from Vandenberg AFB in California which is a test facility. None of the nuclear warheads in use have been detonated "thousands upon thousands of times." Not a one, not once. Nor, for that matter, have nuce torpedos, backpacks, artillery shells, missiles or bombs.

            If you're going to FUD, at least make it plausible.
        • Re:marine life? (Score:5, Informative)

          by SEAL ( 88488 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @08:46PM (#13760832)
          More importantly, it isn't true that you get both a sonic blast and a torpedo explosion. The torpedo may explode-as-in-disintegrate from the sonic blast, but it won't explode-as-in-high-explosives. Modern torpedoes are detonated electronically, not by impact.
    • Re:marine life? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Carnildo ( 712617 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @08:17PM (#13760631) Homepage Journal
      Neither a sonic blast nor a torpedo exploding will cause the harm of a ship sinking. Which would you expect to be worse: short-term, localized effects of a pressure wave, or a massive oil slick from ruptured fuel tanks?
      • Re:marine life? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Futaba-chan ( 541818 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @08:22PM (#13760676)
        Or, worse, an entire nuclear reactor....
        • Re:marine life? (Score:3, Informative)

          Actually, a nuclear reactor sinking to the bottom of a sea is a pretty safe place for it. Water does a very decent job catching the radiation, but not of carrying it around--one of the reasons they use it as a coolant.

          If the hot material from a reactor somehow escapes the sub and falls to the ocean floor, the worst that can happen is you get a tiny area of radioactive sea bed. You won't get enough fish swimming close enough to carry off much radiation. And thanks to the slow activity of plate tectonics,
    • Yeah, but this sonic blast will result in the torpedo detonating, so you get BOTH. Of course it will be bad for wildlife in the area. Pretty much any warfare is bad for the ecology. But hopefully it won't happen that often. If it does, we have other things to worry about.
    • Especially since it makes it sound that a torpedo detonating on impact, and the resultant ship sinking, is somehow not as loud as a sonic blast.
    • by WallaceAndGromit ( 910755 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @08:34PM (#13760754) Homepage
      Actually, being an acoustician, I would be willing to bet that they would use a phased array of loudspeakers. With the correct phasing of the speakers, some pre-determined "point" in the water could be driven to very high sound pressure levels, while the remaining ambient noise, while still loud, may not be all that dangerous. This would occur as a transient excitation from the various loudspeakers propagates away from the source and coalesces at the point in the water where the torpedo is located, the point where a very large pressure spike is generated. There are plenty of smart researchers in the navy and I have my doubts that they would use anything other than a phased array. And by the way, this is the same methodology that they use to destroy kidney stones.
      • by rogue555 ( 671448 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @09:01PM (#13760920)
        Yup, I'd bet so too. A similar project is under development at Georgia Tech. Here they are using pieozoelectric transducers, but that may just be for the model. The real research is for supercavitating torpedoes. This is where the torpedoes form a pocket of water vapor around themselves to reduce friction. I don't know if all torpedoes use this and if the research in the article is part of the same project. This research project collapses the air bubble causing the torpedo to either detonate or its motion to become unstable. The focus here is to determine the necessary input to disrupt the vapor pocket, not the development of the phased array.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      The possible ecological effects? Only liberal leftist red-commie gay pinko tree-hugger types would ask such a rediculous question, or even care. We're talking about saving the lives of human beings, but of course humans serve no purpose other than polluting and ruining the ecosystem of an otherwise perfect world, so they should be killed, right? Especially those red-blooded patriotic American military humans -- they're the worst kind, you know!

      Never mind that the torpedo exploding would make a lot of noi
    • Re:marine life? (Score:3, Insightful)

      by MacGod ( 320762 )

      The possibility of Marine effect is quite real. Past Navy experiments [defenders.org] have had serious deleterious effects on marine life.

      As to why, because whales, dolphins et al. are intelligent, endangered creatures. It doesn't mean you give up everything (or even that you give up this technology) to protect them, but it sure as hell means you consider the ramifications and at least look for alternative methods that don't kill some of the most advanced creatures on this planet.

  • by djblair ( 464047 ) * on Monday October 10, 2005 @08:07PM (#13760556)
    We need to be cautious, as Britney Spears at 200db could have a devistating effect on the entire oceanic ecosystem.
    • ...ONLY the oceanic ecosystem?

      "Oops, I Did It Again" could hurt the ears of foreign spies for months!

      Good call, America!

  • Same thing happens to my brain whenever I hear some people speak.
  • as if ... (Score:3, Funny)

    by croddy ( 659025 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @08:07PM (#13760558)
    as if the explosions, leaking fuel, strong currents, and risk of nuclear waste exposure weren't enough, now marine wildlife have to deal with loud sounds! oh, the humanity!
  • all pantera, all the time!
  • by Serveert ( 102805 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @08:08PM (#13760563)
    Everyone on the ship will have all you can eat seafood for weeks.

    Bonus if you get some giant squid.
  • Who cares? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Lt.Hawkins ( 17467 )
    When asked about the possible ecological effects on marine life the military had no comment.
    Who cares? Fish vs. people, and not in an abstract, "this could hurt the environment long term, for mere economic benefit" way. Either a few fish will die, or a ship full of hundreds or thousands of sailors could be damaged or destroyed.

    And then theres the ecological damage from a sunken ship (petrol fuel, nuclear reactors possibly) that would also harm the environment long term, plus the explosion itself will be pre
    • Re:Who cares? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by ptbarnett ( 159784 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @08:25PM (#13760703)
      And then theres the ecological damage from a sunken ship (petrol fuel, nuclear reactors possibly) that would also harm the environment long term, plus the explosion itself will be pretty darn loud.

      Reading TFA, the concern is not over the effects of sonic blast vs. sinking ship.

      The concern is the effect of open-water testing of the sonic blast against simulated or dummy threats in the ocean.

      • by kcelery ( 410487 )
        Hook up your speaker to Micheal Jackson, at lower volume, that you're having a party, the whales and dolphins will get the message and go away.
    • by billstewart ( 78916 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @08:28PM (#13760719) Journal
      Sound travels much farther under water, especially if you need to crank up your speakers to 11 million to blow torpedoes out of the water. It's hard to get good information without destructive testing, but very-high-level-sound activities like some of the research the Navy is doing off Monterey Canyon appear to have very serious effects on whales and dolphins over a several hundred mile wide area - echolocation and inter-pack communications don't work very well if your eardrums are blown out. I don't know if this is quite as loud, but it wouldn't be surprising if it's a potentially serious problem for marine life.

      Of course, as you say, the Navy would rather avoid having lots of sailors killed also, and sunken ships are a toxic mess, but the amount of sound it takes to trash a torpedo is a lot more than the amount you get from the torpedo's explosion.

  • Wires (Score:5, Funny)

    by romka1 ( 891990 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @08:09PM (#13760569) Homepage
    To get best results they need gold power cables at 1000 for each speaker :)
  • Prediction (Score:2, Funny)

    by EdwinBoyd ( 810701 )
    I predict 3 types of comments

    1. "Won't someone please think of the Whales!!??"

    2. "I bet they'll be playing *insert flavour of the month popstar here* LOLS!!"

    3. "REPOST!!!" (Regardless of whether this is a repost or not).
  • When asked about the possible ecological effects on marine life the military had no comment.

    Uh, yeah. Good point. Because a sinking ship (full of people no less) has no environmental impact. If you don't care about the dead people, at least the diesel fuel? That works for you?

    • Uh, yeah. Good point. Because a sinking ship (full of people no less) has no environmental impact. If you don't care about the dead people, at least the diesel fuel? That works for you?

      The USS Arizona sitting at the bottom of Pearl Harbor is still leaking diesel to this day. One of these days the rust is going to get to the metal enough to release a couple thousand (tens of thousands?) gallons all at once. Should be a study in what can happen when a ship does get hit with a torpedo.
  • Loud noises (Score:2, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward
    When asked about the possible ecological effects on marine life the military had no comment.

    Cus there's no way that a torpedo exploding against the side of an Aegis cruiser might be a tad on the loud side too.

  • They should train dolphins and manatees to ram the torpedoes head on far enough away from the ship that no damage is done. Oh yeah, and some sea turtles to clear the way through mine infested waters!
  • by Arimatheus ( 779497 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @08:15PM (#13760614)
    "Well, they die....you stupid liberals..."
  • Active defenses (such as counter-exploding tank armor) aren't there to avoid damage - they're there to mitigate against the worst impacts of damage against catastrophic losses. A REAL explosion underwater is going to generate catastrophic noise, and will directly kill and otherwise fatally affect a lot of native life - a counter-blast of sound isn't much to compare, even in select "false alarm" situations.

    It may help to think about it this way: Automobile air bags cost a lot of money to install and repack
  • When I was in college, I lived in a big house with a bunch of other people, and we had a lot of squirrels that would run across the roof. There was one girl who lived in the top corner room one summer who got annoyed by the squirrels making a racket every morning around 5am, especially because she usually went to bed around 3-4am. (She wasn't a hacker, but literature majors often keep similar hours.) So one night about 3am she turned her stereo speakers against the wall and cranked up the bass to wake up
  • Marine Life (Score:3, Funny)

    by np_bernstein ( 453840 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @08:22PM (#13760675) Homepage
    When asked about the possible ecological effects on marine life the military had no comment.

    I think the whole point is to protect the lives of the marines on the ships. :)
  • Dolphins (Score:2, Funny)

    by Zecritic ( 858738 )
    Of course they had no comment, because the intention is to stop the dolphins with dartguns on their head!
  • Sonar systems? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by HockeyPuck ( 141947 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @08:25PM (#13760704)
    Would this damage submarines sonar or other listening devices?
  • will it stop a suicide bomber like the boat that damaged the USS Cole?
  • Because nobody at Slashdot ever bothers to read the article or know anything about the various issues involved before commenting, let me point out that the system is NOT for submarines, but for surface ships.

    Also, the impact of high energy sound waves is significantly greater than most people here seem to think. They carry for miles underwater, and can cause severe problems in all manner of marine life. It's something to consider.
  • Six of one (Score:2, Redundant)

    by RomulusNR ( 29439 )
    When asked about the possible ecological effects on marine life the military had no comment.

    As much as I dislike the military's utter disdain for animal^H^H^H^H^H^H life, I have to admit that the ecological effects of the torpedo hitting the hull and sinking the (nuclear) submarine are probably at least as bad.
  • Fine, but I have the patent on this counter measure, earplugs for torpedos. :)

    And this covers all the variations, ear muffs, fingers in ears, scarfs, saying "na na na na na na", etc.

    So how much does this system cost per ship vs. some simple counter measure? Really think this will see wide spread deployment?
  • No mention of range. I wonder if this could be used against a sub - if so, I'm sure I'm not the first to think of it. The wave would probably not have as much force in air, so it would likely affect any submerged system with little to no air gap. I wonder if it's powerful enough to knock out a sub's (sensative) receive transducer? That would certainly remove a sub's effectiveness - blinding it.

    Though, as mentioned already on this page, torpedos and subs aren't our #1 threat - it's the single suicidal pe
  • So this is what they were testing a few years ago off the West coast. At the time people thought it was a new sonar system that was causing whales and dolphins to beach themselves. They were test firing this system and seeing how well it did against a torpedo! How would you have liked to be the Navy seaman playing air guitar as a torpedo came at your ship?
  • How long till they start making torpedos smart enough to tell the difference between powerful sound waves and a physical object?
  • "dead fish or dead sailors? It's all chum to me, chum " -- Jaws
  • I wonder what the range is....
    • Just thinking about that made me wince, but the thing is, wouldn't a sonar operator already have taken off the headphones because they were firing a torpedo? So only a sonar operator from a third party would really be affected, and they'd quite possibly realize that a torpedo had been fired, and avert losing their hearing.
  • I _need_ one of those, oh wait, RTFA, not regular tansducer. Fuck, oh well. At least the industrial ones are cheap. And according to my audio friend they are about the equal to real transducers as Ghetto blasters. That's okay, it's just for movies anyway.
  • On the other hand (Score:5, Insightful)

    by davmoo ( 63521 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @09:31PM (#13761054)
    I bet those of you making the "but what about the animals" comments would care less about the animals if you had friends or relatives serving on a ship that could be a torpedo target.

    I love animals, I'm all for ecology and protecting wildlife, etc etc. I own a big chunk of land, and I don't cut a bush or move a bolder without thinking about what it might do to the animals...and 99 percent of the time, I let the animals win. But when the choices are limited to 'humans live but animals die' and 'humans die but animals live', I'll take choice number one every time, and with no regrets what so ever.
    • by CiXeL ( 56313 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @10:10PM (#13761247) Homepage
      and currently stationed by iraq. While I say the more defensive weapons the better, if we have to do it at the expense of making all the whales extinct I say its not worth it. This isnt about saving plankton here, this is about not accidently blowing away the eardrums and thus killing thousands of whales and other marine creatures. There have been experiments with this technology and coincidentally there were massive beachings as the marine mammals could no longer navigate correctly. There are billions of us, I can't say the same for the whales.
  • Interesting... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by andy55 ( 743992 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @09:49PM (#13761148) Homepage

    As a former naval submarine lieutenant, this is pretty interesting... Indeed, our modern torpedoes (ADCAPs) travel at high speed, track on both passive and active acoustics, and rely on active ranging to detonate at an ideal distance under the ship. That's right, under -- torpedoes do the most damage by detonating a small distance (on the order of a couple dozen feet) below the center of a hull. The void formed from the detonation causes the target's hull to buckle/crack/shatter inward due to its own weight. A single ADCAP can in theory sink an entire carrier, but sub captains typically shoot two b/c the carrier is typically the primary objective. The kind of acoustics described in the article would be tough for even an ADCAP to work around, not to mention it takes our contractors many years to turn around software upgrades to the weapons that would filtering to increases its chances. Then again, good this is a DARPA project, meaning it'd take 5+ years to see any deployment in the fleet anyway.

    The most cost effective anti-torpedo weapon a surface ship can have is the nixie. It's a towed (inflated, I believe) thing that trails the ship with ship-signature acoustics running on it, sucking up any torps on the ship's trail. Given their low lost, low maintenance, and (extremely!) high effectiveness they're the best deal in town.

  • by Dommo ( 870028 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @09:57PM (#13761182)
    I've asked him about how powerful the sonar was and to give you an idea how dangerous it is he told me about some standard submarine procedure. Basically, if a submarine comes under threat from enemy frogmen or divers, the defence the sub has is to turn the active sonar on and start pinging. If a diver is underwater and within a couple hundred yards, he will die from the intensity of the sound under water. In other words the sonar is VERY powerful. Trust me a 200db blast will likely give someone a very bad day if they are near by.
  • This is brilliant. (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Khyber ( 864651 ) <techkitsune@gmail.com> on Monday October 10, 2005 @10:32PM (#13761353) Homepage Journal
    If this is to blow torpedoes out of the water, I've got one question. If anyone's running sonar, and you blast a torpedo out of the water, wouldn't you tend to alert everyone else around you??
  • by katty kat ( 808727 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @10:45PM (#13761395)
    When asked about the possible ecological effects on marine life the military had no comment.

    When asked the question a second time the military man looked up and said loudly "what, did you say something?"

  • by charlesbakerharris ( 623282 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @10:47PM (#13761399)
    When asked about the possible ecological effects on marine life the military had no comment.

    Oh, right. Because we would *hate* to have a loud noise in the ocean instead of thousands of gallons of fuel oil or a ruptured nuclear reactor from a sunk ship.

    Brought to you by the same retards who nixed nuclear power for environmental reasons, forcing the country to depend on burning coal.

    • The thing is, you need to do a cost/benefit analysis.

      Answer these questions:

      When was the last time a US ship was hit with a torpedo? Vietnam maybe? Korea?

      How often would this system be tested on various vessels, during war games and such? (Answer, a lot. The navy doesn't usually have a lot of work to do, so they practice. A lot.)

      What's the impact on marine mammals, and over what range? (they have a long history of being injured by loud noises, sensitive auditory systems and all)

      Ok, so if you make half or 2/
  • by SengirV ( 203400 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @11:04PM (#13761471)
    I guess the environmental whackjobs think it's better to have a nuclear reactor smashed into a million pieces instead. Not the mention the conventional fuel, and all the other non envionemntally friendly material on a ship spilling into the ocean.
  • by jlseagull ( 106472 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @11:06PM (#13761500) Homepage
    I'm 90% sure I know what this is for. I'm not a naval warfare specialist, but I am a scientist with an interest in these things.

    In the 1990s, the Russians developed the prototype for what would later be termed the Shkval or Squall supercavitation torpedo. Knowing the Russians, the Chinese probably have them too.

    Cavitation [wikipedia.org] is a phenomena where a body moving through the water pushes the water out of the way so fast that it creates bubbles around the object (fast = lower pressure = water vaporization = bubbles). You may have heard of propellers cavitating - that's where small bubbles of water vapor form then burst on the low pressure side of a prop blade, causing lots of noise and even damage to the blade when they implode.

    Supercavitation [wikipedia.org], on the other hand, is an intentional phenomena where a blunt-nosed object is shot through the water, creating low pressure vortices on the sides. Air or exhaust gases are injected into these vortices, creating a static "bubble" around the object that drastically reduces friction - perhaps up to an order of magnitude. You have to fire these things at about 50mph or greater to start the supercav effect going, effectively "handing off" the bubble to the torpedo, which then sustains it.

    The numbers on these torpedoes are incredible [ucg.com]: we're talking about a 300mph torp carrying a 460lb warhead with a range in excess of 7000 yards. That's the tame version - others carry nukes. In other words, carrier-killers.

    Supercavitation torpedoes, as you can imagine, are incredibly noisy and easy to detect - you just can't get away from them because they're so fast. This sonic projector essentially sends a high-energy single pulse through the water directed at an incoming torpedo. That pulse probably wouldn't be able to crack a torpedo - you'd probably need on the order of 250-500PSIG overpressure to do that, (scuba tanks contain 2000PSIG regularly). You wouldn't be able to detonate the high explosive, because you need a wavefront speed above the detonation velocity, which for C4 is about 7000m/s (much slower than the speed of sound in water, 1482m/s).

    I don't have the time right now to spin the equations, so I could be wrong.

    However, you would be able to disrupt and dissipate that bubble around an incoming supercavitation weapon with a high-energy sonic pulse. Break that bubble, and the torp stops dead in the water because it can't reform the bubble around itself. If it mistakes that sudden stop for a ship hull - boom.

    • I don't see the advantage of this system over using a torpedo to destroy an incoming shkval. You should be able to home in on that sucker from 100 miles away. I would think a head shot from the target would do the trick.

      Also, I thought that particular weapon wasn't suited to non-nuclear use because it can't steer well inside it's bubble and it's so noisy it can't home on a target. Ah, I see from this [ucg.com] article initial versions were unguided, current versions have an autopilot, and future versions will slo

  • by davidbofinger ( 703269 ) on Monday October 10, 2005 @11:39PM (#13761829) Homepage

    When asked about the possible ecological effects on marine life the military had no comment.

    They got asked this because of the concern with low frequency sonar. But the comparison is probably not all that relevant. Low frequency goes for ever, hence the humpback whale's use of it for communication. So a low frequency sonar can hurt a whale that's quite some way away.

    The anti-torpedo weapon, on the other hand, uses shock waves. Shock waves are mostly made of high frequency components which die out quickly. So probably only those whales in the immediate vicinity are in trouble. Just do all the testing in a "desert" part of the ocean, where there's no life.

"Money is the root of all money." -- the moving finger

Working...