Submarine navigation

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Submarine navigation underwater requires special skills and technologies not needed by surface ships. The challenges of underwater navigation have become more important as submarines spend more time underwater, travelling greater distances and at higher speed. Military submarines travel underwater in an environment of total darkness with neither windows nor lights. Operating in stealth mode, they cannot use their active sonar systems to ping ahead for underwater hazards such as undersea mountains, drilling rigs or other submarines. Surfacing to obtain navigational fixes is precluded by pervasive anti-submarine warfare detection systems such as radar and satellite surveillance. Antenna masts and antenna-equipped periscopes can be raised to obtain navigational signals but in areas of heavy surveillance, only for a few seconds or minutes;[1] current radar technology can detect even a slender periscope while submarine shadows may be plainly visible from the air.

Surfaced submarines entering and leaving port navigate similarly to traditional ships but with a few extra considerations because most of the ship rides below the waterline, making them hard for other ships to see and identify.

USS San Francisco (SSN-711) suffered substantial damage after colliding at high-speed with an undersea mountain.
A submarine at periscope depth risks visual or radar detection
File:Annapolis masts.jpg
Submarines can raise various antenna masts, radar masts and periscopes to facilitate communications and navigation

Navigational technologies

Surface and near-surface navigation

On the surface or at periscope depth, submarines have used these methods to fix their position:

  • Satellite navigation:
  • Terrestrial radio-based navigation systems; largely superseded by satellite systems
    • LORAN—seldom if rarely used anymore.
    • CHAYKA, the Russian counterpart of LORAN
    • OMEGA, the Western counterpart of the Alpha Navigation System, no longer in use
    • Alpha, the Russian counterpart of the Omega Navigation System
  • Celestial navigation using the periscope, or sextant—seldom used anymore due to advancement in technology
  • Radar navigation; radar signals are easily detected so radar is normally only used in friendly waters entering and exiting ports. With the implementation of a more advanced radar system, many new techniques have been implemented in this process.
  • Active sonar; like radar, active sonar systems are readily detected, so active sonar is usually used only entering and exiting ports.
  • Pilotage — in coastal and internal waters, surfaced submarines rely on the standard system of navigational aids (buoys, navigational markers, lighthouses, etc.), utilizing the periscopes for obtaining lines of position to plot a triangulation fix.
  • Voyage Management System—referred to as the VMS, utilizes digital charts with other external sources fed in, to establish the ship's position. Other information may also be entered in manually in establishing a high quality fix or position.

Deep water navigation

At depths below periscope depth submarines determine their position using:

See also

Footnotes

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References

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