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US Navy submarine successfully launches and recovers underwater drone

Saturday, August 1st 2015 - 07:51 UTC
Full article 4 comments
The underwater drone launched from the USS North Dakota is a REMUS 600 Autonomous Underwater Vehicle The underwater drone launched from the USS North Dakota is a REMUS 600 Autonomous Underwater Vehicle
REMUS 600 is modeled after REMUS 100 UUV, built in Norway and can be deployed for mine counter measure, harbor security plus and search and salvage REMUS 600 is modeled after REMUS 100 UUV, built in Norway and can be deployed for mine counter measure, harbor security plus and search and salvage

The Virginia-class nuclear-powered fast attack submarine USS North Dakota (SSN-784) has launched and recovered an underwater drone for the first time. This week, the USS North Dakota returned to the United States after a nearly two-month deployment to the Mediterranean Sea. The submarine was specifically tasked with testing the launch and recovery of an unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV) while submerged.

 “This was something they thought we could go do. We went out, and we proved that,” the sub’s commanding officer, Captain Douglas Gordon said.

Gordon declined to provide additional details on the mission except that the underwater drone was launched from a dry deck shelter – a removable module that can be attached to a submarine – which makes entering and exiting a sub easier when the boat is submerged.

He also highlighted that thanks to the underwater drone, a submarine is now capable of executing more than one mission simultaneously: “We can do a dual mission. UUVs do their thing while we do other operations.”

The underwater drone launched from the USS North Dakota is a REMUS 600 Autonomous Underwater Vehicle, but the commanding officer declined to elaborate whether the UUV was self-guided or piloted by a crew member.

Designed through funding from the Office of Naval Research, the REMUS 600 is modeled after the REMUS 100 UUV, built by the Norwegian-based Kongsberg Maritime defense contractor, and can be deployed for a wide range of missions including mine counter measure, harbor security, and search and salvage operations.

The U.S. Navy’s director of undersea warfare, Rear Admiral Joseph Tofalo, said in an interview in April that the navy will primarily rely on commercially available UUVs for the time being:

We’re using commercial off-the-shelf technologies to do real world missions for the combatant commander. The oil and gas industry uses these things for all kinds of functions. The submarine force will be adapting this. The sensors are similar to the sensors that the oil and gas industry might use. They might be surveying where their oil pipes are, whereas we might want to be looking for a mine field.

Piloting an underwater drone is technically very challenging, since communicating with UUVs is extremely difficult – oceans are opaque to radio signals and acoustic signals travel a lot more slowly than radio waves. Consequently, UUVs will have to operate almost completely autonomously.

Categories: Politics, United States.

Top Comments

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  • ChrisR

    The Yanks are militarising the Mediterranean Sea!

    The Spanish will be livid once they have worked out WTF the article is on about. :o)

    Aug 01st, 2015 - 05:05 pm 0
  • lsolde

    How deep can the drone go?

    Aug 01st, 2015 - 09:09 pm 0
  • Conqueror

    @2. It's designed for 600 metres, but can be configured for 1500 metres.

    Aug 02nd, 2015 - 09:56 am 0
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