• Ghost Shark: The huge stealth advantage of autonomous submarines

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Fri Apr 19 13:51:49 2024
    XPost: sci.military.naval, soc.history.war.misc

    from
    https://newatlas.com/military/ghost-shark-autonomous-fleet-submarine/

    Ghost Shark: The huge stealth advantage of autonomous submarines
    By David Szondy
    April 19, 2024

    Artist's concept of Ghost Shark Australian Government
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    Australia's robotic submarine program is a year ahead of schedule as the government takes delivery of the first Ghost Shark Extra-Large
    Autonomous Undersea Vehicle (XL-AUV) prototype, with three more to
    follow next year.

    The Australian defense sector has had a reputation for being something
    of a backwater, but the increasing importance of the Indo-Pacific
    region, saber rattling by China, and North Korea taking missile pot
    shots over Japan has changed that. Today, the Australian defense budget
    is undergoing a massive increase, there's a greater emphasis on domestic defense production, and the Royal Australian Navy is working with the
    US, Britain, and (perhaps) Japan to acquire long-range nuclear attack submarines capable of operating north of the continent.

    Part of this new strategy involves developing autonomous platforms that
    can act as force multipliers. Instead of just sending out submarine
    patrols, Canberra wants to include autonomous drones that can operate
    for long durations without a crew to increase the capabilities of the
    patrols.

    Developed by the Defence Department and Anduril Australia along with
    industry partners, Ghost Shark is described as "Mission Zero" for the government's Advanced Strategic Capabilities Accelerator (ASCA). The
    craft is part of the government's project to build or acquire subsea
    warfare capabilities and new autonomous and uncrewed underwater
    vehicles, which was supposed to take three years to create the first
    prototype but is ahead of schedule.

    Ghost Shark on the pier
    Ghost Shark on the pierAustralian Government

    Though not many details have been given about the specifications of the
    craft, it's smaller than a conventional submarine because it doesn't
    require the pressure-proof hull for a crew or the complex
    sound-deadening equipment needed to muffle the noise of the submariners'
    moving about and their life support equipment. Instead, the machinery
    and electronics are set in watertight modules.

    When deployed, Ghost Shark will allow the Royal Australian Navy to carry
    out stealthy, long-range autonomous undersea warfare with persistent intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance and strike capabilities. The
    craft will be able to work with Navy and allied vessels as part of the
    AUKUS treaty.

    "This collaboration combines Navy’s expertise, ASCA’s speed to delivery, Defence’s scientific smarts and Anduril Australia’s experience in agile innovation," said Chief of Navy, Vice Admiral Mark Hammond. "We are a
    nation girt by sea, and the Ghost Shark is one of the tools we are
    developing for the Navy to patrol and protect our oceans and our
    connection to the world."

    Source: Australian Government

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    2 COMMENTS
    David Szondy
    David Szondy
    David Szondy is a playwright, author and journalist based in Seattle, Washington. A retired field archaeologist and university lecturer, he
    has a background in the history of science, technology, and medicine
    with a particular emphasis on aerospace, military, and cybernetic
    subjects. In addition, he is the author of four award-winning plays, a
    novel, reviews, and a plethora of scholarly works ranging from
    industrial archaeology to law. David has worked as a feature writer for
    many international magazines and has been a feature writer for New Atlas
    since 2011.

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    Robt APRIL 19, 2024 03:59 AM
    Re: It’s smaller because there’s no crew etc..
    That seems logical apart from the ‘pressure-proof hull’ comment.
    If you go to certain depths, your hull better be pressure proof,
    otherwise you won’t have a sub for very long; crew or no crew

    yawood APRIL 19, 2024 07:18 AM
    @Robt Existing submarines have a casing around the pressure-proof hull,
    inside which certain things can be carried. These are flooded areas so
    it does not matter how deep the submarines go they can't collapse. It is
    the same with this vessel. As the article says, the machinery and
    electronics are set in water-tight modules which implies that the rest
    will be flooded. The water-tight modules will be pressure-proof to a
    certain depth (I imagine, much greater than would be necessary with a
    crewed vessel with a large pressurised area). You are right in that even
    this will collapse eventually but the pressure-proof areas that contain machinery and electronics is much smaller and thus more easily
    constructed. There is also a great deal of machinery in a crewed
    submarine that is just there to keep the crew alive and all this can be discarded.

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