enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Submarine navigation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Submarine_navigation

    At depths below periscope depth submarines determine their position using: Dead reckoning course information obtained from the ship's gyrocompass , measured speed and estimates of local ocean currents, this could also be considered an estimated position as long as the ocean current is computed in.

  3. Periscope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Periscope

    1889 Arthur Krebs & Jean Rey periscope for the French submarine Gymnote. Periscopes allow a submarine, when submerged at a relatively shallow depth, to search visually for nearby targets and threats on the surface of the water and in the air. When not in use, a submarine's periscope retracts into the hull.

  4. Wikipedia : Featured picture candidates/Periscope Depth

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Periscope_Depth

    Submarines can be spotted from aircraft when they're operating at a shallow depth pretty much anywhere where the water is clear (which is why they generally stay bellow periscope depth) so this is isn't all that rare. Nick Dowling 03:10, 3 August 2008 (UTC) Support-- nicer image than the failed candidate, good encyc. value. Not a common photo ...

  5. Sail (submarine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sail_(submarine)

    Sail of the French nuclear submarine Casabianca showing the diving planes, camouflaged masts, periscope, electronic warfare masts, door and windows.. In naval parlance, the sail (American usage) or fin (British/Commonwealth usage) (also known as a fairwater) of a submarine is the tower-like structure found on the dorsal (topside) surface of submarines.

  6. Photonics mast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photonics_mast

    A photonics mast aboard a Virginia-class submarine. A photonics mast (or optronics mast [1]) is a sensor on a submarine which functions similarly to a periscope without requiring a periscope tube, thus freeing design space during construction and limiting risks of water leakage in the event of damage.

  7. Submarine snorkel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Submarine_snorkel

    Also, "periscope feather" (the wave created by the snorkel or periscope moving through the water) can be spotted in calm seas. During the early months of the Battle of the Atlantic in World War II, British ships using the radar set Model 271 were able to detect the periscope of a submerged submarine at a distance of 800 m (0.50 mi) during tests ...

  8. Collins-class submarine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collins-class_submarine

    [57] [139] When surfaced or at periscope depth, the Collins-class boats can use a Kelvin Hughes Type 1007 surface search radar, which is situated in a retractable mast on the fin. [10] [139] The fin of Sheean. The CH093 attack periscope mast is extended, and one of the panels for the distributed sonar array can be seen at the bottom right of ...

  9. Virtual periscope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_periscope

    Virtual periscope is a system that allows submerged submarines to observe the surface above them without having to come to a shallower depth, as is required by traditional periscopes. The system, described in a patent as "Virtual Periscope", [1] was tested in 2005 aboard USS Chicago (SSN-721). It employed a small camera mounted on the sail of ...