US20040065247A1 - Unmanned underwater vehicle for tracking and homing in on submarines - Google Patents
Unmanned underwater vehicle for tracking and homing in on submarines Download PDFInfo
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- US20040065247A1 US20040065247A1 US10/267,888 US26788802A US2004065247A1 US 20040065247 A1 US20040065247 A1 US 20040065247A1 US 26788802 A US26788802 A US 26788802A US 2004065247 A1 US2004065247 A1 US 2004065247A1
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B63—SHIPS OR OTHER WATERBORNE VESSELS; RELATED EQUIPMENT
- B63G—OFFENSIVE OR DEFENSIVE ARRANGEMENTS ON VESSELS; MINE-LAYING; MINE-SWEEPING; SUBMARINES; AIRCRAFT CARRIERS
- B63G8/00—Underwater vessels, e.g. submarines; Equipment specially adapted therefor
- B63G8/001—Underwater vessels adapted for special purposes, e.g. unmanned underwater vessels; Equipment specially adapted therefor, e.g. docking stations
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F42—AMMUNITION; BLASTING
- F42B—EXPLOSIVE CHARGES, e.g. FOR BLASTING, FIREWORKS, AMMUNITION
- F42B12/00—Projectiles, missiles or mines characterised by the warhead, the intended effect, or the material
- F42B12/02—Projectiles, missiles or mines characterised by the warhead, the intended effect, or the material characterised by the warhead or the intended effect
- F42B12/36—Projectiles, missiles or mines characterised by the warhead, the intended effect, or the material characterised by the warhead or the intended effect for dispensing materials; for producing chemical or physical reaction; for signalling ; for transmitting information
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F42—AMMUNITION; BLASTING
- F42B—EXPLOSIVE CHARGES, e.g. FOR BLASTING, FIREWORKS, AMMUNITION
- F42B12/00—Projectiles, missiles or mines characterised by the warhead, the intended effect, or the material
- F42B12/02—Projectiles, missiles or mines characterised by the warhead, the intended effect, or the material characterised by the warhead or the intended effect
- F42B12/36—Projectiles, missiles or mines characterised by the warhead, the intended effect, or the material characterised by the warhead or the intended effect for dispensing materials; for producing chemical or physical reaction; for signalling ; for transmitting information
- F42B12/365—Projectiles transmitting information to a remote location using optical or electronic means
Definitions
- the present invention relates to an unmanned underwater vehicle for use in tracking and homing in on submarines.
- UUV unmanned underwater vehicle
- an unmanned underwater vehicle broadly comprises a propulsion unit and a means for attaching the vehicle to the hull of a submarine.
- the attaching means comprises at least one movable corkscrew device and/or at least one movable permanent magnet.
- a method for intercepting and covertly reporting the activities of a submarine broadly comprises the steps of launching an unmanned underwater vehicle from a platform in the vicinity of the submarine, targeting a particular area of the submarine suited for stealthy and long-term attachment, navigating the unmanned underwater vehicle to the targeted area, and attaching the unmanned underwater vehicle to the submarine.
- the unmanned underwater vehicle can then transmit a signal giving the location of the submarine.
- FIG. 1 is a schematic representation of an unmanned underwater vehicle approaching a target submarine
- FIG. 2 is a schematic representation illustrating an unmanned underwater vehicle assuming an attachment orientation
- FIG. 3 is a schematic representation illustrating an unmanned underwater vehicle executing a mechanical attachment to a submarine
- FIG. 4 is a schematic representation illustrating an unmanned underwater vehicle executing a magnetic attachment to a submarine
- FIG. 5 is a schematic representation illustrating an unmanned underwater vehicle acting as a torpedo homing beacon
- FIG. 6 is a schematic representation illustrating an unmanned underwater vehicle detaching from a submarine.
- FIG. 7 is a schematic representation of an unmanned underwater vehicle in accordance with the present invention.
- the present invention relates to a special-purpose, self-propelled unmanned underwater vehicle 10 as shown in FIGS. 1 - 7 that may be launched from any of numerous platforms in the vicinity of a submarine 12 .
- the vehicle 10 may be guided toward the submarine 12 by a controller 13 (See FIG. 7) using data from internal (unmanned underwater vehicle-mounted) and/or external (launch platform-mounted) sensors of various types, such as acoustic, optic, and magnetic sensors.
- External sensory data may be fed to the vehicle 10 through a thin, spooled, trailing wire or by using optical or other covert methods. As can be seen from FIG.
- the vehicle 10 preferably approaches the submarine 12 from behind, along a tangential path, so as to avoid a collision that might alert the submarine crew and damage the vehicle 10 and its components.
- the vehicle 10 will target a predetermined area of the submarine that is well suited for both stealthy and longterm attachment.
- the vehicle 10 will match the submarine's speed and direction. This can be accomplished through adjustment of the forward thrust of the vehicle 10 and the positioning of its forward and rear control surfaces 14 and 15 , respectively.
- the vehicle 10 has a surface 16 which is to be positioned adjacent the hull 18 of the submarine 12 . As the vehicle 10 approaches the submarine 12 , it maneuvers to orient the surface 16 towards the hull 18 . This maneuvering may be carried out using the control surfaces 14 and 15 and/or thrusters 20 onboard the vehicle 10 .
- the vehicle 10 brushes up against the hull 18 using one or more of several techniques.
- Rear control surfaces 15 and forward control surfaces 14 can induce lift in the direction of the submarine hull 18 .
- Built-in thrusters 20 can act as suction devices.
- the shape of the underwater vehicle hull can create a venturi effect, drawing the vehicle 10 toward the submarine 12 .
- Fold-out panels 22 can be provided on the vehicle to divert water flow over the vehicle 10 . As forward thrust from the vehicle's propeller(s) 25 compensates for axial drag, these methods will produce forces causing the hull 26 of the vehicle 10 to be pinned against the submarine 12 .
- the vehicle 10 With the vehicle 10 pinned against the submarine hull 18 at a predetermined location and orientation, the vehicle 10 begins its attachment routine.
- the vehicle 10 must be oriented so that its attachment apparatus is facing the submarine hull 18 .
- the vehicle propeller(s) 25 provides forward thrust to maintain the static location of the vehicle 10 with respect to the submarine 12 .
- the vehicle 10 attaches itself to the submarine 12 , the exact attachment method depending upon the nature of the submarine's hull surface.
- a submarine's outer layer is not rubberlike, it is most likely ferrous and, therefore, ferromagnetic.
- the vehicle 10 attaches itself to the submarine 12 using one or more permanent magnets 38 residing within the vehicle hull 26 .
- the magnet(s) 38 are driven toward the vehicle hull 26 along a rotating screw 40 powered by a low-speed, high-torque electric motor 42 .
- Magnetic attachment may also be possible if the submarine 12 has a sufficiently thin rubberlike coating 30 .
- the permanent magnets 38 may also be used to assist in drawing the vehicle 10 toward a ferrous submarine hull during the vehicle's final approach.
- the permanent magnets 38 may be briefly augmented by collocated electromagnets (not shown). High power requirements, however, would make electromagnets unsuitable for extended operation with an electrically powered unmanned underwater vehicle.
- the motor 46 used to drive the propeller(s) 25 may become a generator, powered by water turning the propeller(s) 25 .
- the generator may be used to recharge one or more batteries 29 onboard the vehicle 10 , reducing the quantity of batteries needed for a long mission.
- the vehicle 10 Attached to the host submarine 12 , the vehicle 10 remains quiet and motionless except for the propeller(s) 25 , drive shaft 27 and motor-generator 46 . Its function is to go wherever the submarine 12 goes and remain undetected by the submarine crew.
- the vehicle 10 may be used to collect and store data on compass bearing, speed—as indicated by the propeller turning rate—and oceanographic conditions such as depth and temperature.
- the vehicle 10 may reveal its location by emitting a dye marker 50 that floats to the surface and is visible from above, akin to an oil slick, or by periodically ejecting an RF beacon 52 similar in operation to an emergency position indicating radio beacon (EPIRB).
- EIRB emergency position indicating radio beacon
- An EPIRB is an RF transmitter that notifies maritime rescue services by sending a coded signal which is relayed by satellite to a ground station. When released from a submerged vessel, it rises to the surface and begins transmitting a distress call automatically. The RF beacon 52 could also upload stored data.
- the vehicle 10 may also contain one or more hydrophones 54 for monitoring the acoustic environment at all times. If it is decided that the host submarine 12 must be located and destroyed, a coded acoustic signal may be transmitted to the vehicle 10 by methods which can cover large areas of ocean, such as surface ship active sonar, submarine active sonar, helicopter dip sonar, seafloor-mounted acoustic projectors, etc. Upon receiving and decoding this command, the vehicle 10 may immediately begin transmitting acoustically by means of an acoustic projector 56 .
- the term “transducer” can refer to both an acoustic projector, such as 56 , and an acoustic receiver, such as hydrophones 54 .
- the term “hydrophone” refers explicitly to an acoustic receiver.
- the acoustic output may be of a frequency and source level that will travel great distances underwater, facilitating rapid localization of the submarine 12 .
- the submarine 12 must be localized and attacked before it has time to surface, stop moving, deploy divers, deactivate the vehicle 10 , and disappear beneath the waves. It should be noted that the act of surfacing and stopping greatly increases the submarine's vulnerability, especially to attack from the air.
- the hydrophone(s) 54 may begin echo-repeating those signals through its acoustic projector 56 , thereby acting as a homing beacon for nearby torpedo 58 as shown in FIG. 5.
- the vehicle 10 If the vehicle 10 remains quiet, once attached it can likely remain there undetected until located visually. There is no practical way to inspect the hull of a moving or deeply submerged submarine. Hull inspections at sea, which are quite rare, must be done with the submarine almost stationary and at or near the surface. The conventional method of performing such an inspection involves divers using scuba equipment and visual aids. Assuming that one does not want the vehicle 10 to be detected, the vehicle 10 can detach itself upon completion of its mission or under speed and depth conditions that permit a visual inspection of the submarine hull 18 . Speed can be determined by measuring vehicle propeller turning rate, using a sensor 64 such as an accelerometer, a tachometer or from acoustic cues. Depth can be gauged via a pressure sensor 60 .
- a sensor 64 such as an accelerometer, a tachometer or from acoustic cues.
- Depth can be gauged via a pressure sensor 60 .
- the vehicle 10 If the vehicle 10 is attached to the submarine's rubber coating 30 , it will detach itself simply by reversing the direction of the electric motor 34 which drove the corkscrew(s) 36 into the coating. As soon as the corkscrew(s) 36 separate(s) from the hull 18 , the vehicle 10 will drift away. If permanent magnets 38 are employed, detachment is accomplished by driving the magnets 38 away from the submarine hull 18 , combined with propulsive thrust to overcome the diminished yet still finite magnetic attraction between the vehicle 10 and submarine hull 18 . In either case, separation must be executed in a controlled maneuver so as to avoid striking the submarine hull 18 or being sucked into its propellers.
- the vehicle 10 Upon detaching from the submarine 12 , as shown in FIG. 6, the vehicle 10 will proceed far enough away to preclude its visual detection by submarine divers.
- the vehicle 10 may upload stored data by releasing an RF beacon 52 and then scuttle itself.
- the vehicle 10 may traverse to a predetermined pickup point, surface with the aid of a balloon 62 inflated by gas from a pressurized flask, signal its location via an acoustic or RF link, and await recovery.
- FIG. 7 provides a schematic diagram of the components of the vehicle 10 . These components are operatively connected to controller 13 which controls and coordinates operation of the components to provide the functionality disclosed above.
- the vehicle 10 may be used to covertly monitor and report the activities of a submarine.
- the vehicle 10 may also be used as a remotely activated, acoustic localizing beacon for anti-submarine warfare forces.
- the vehicle 10 may also be used to act as an echo-repeater or other type of torpedo acoustic homing beacon.
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- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
- Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
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- Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
- Aviation & Aerospace Engineering (AREA)
- Measurement Of Velocity Or Position Using Acoustic Or Ultrasonic Waves (AREA)
Abstract
The present invention relates to an unmanned underwater vehicle for tracking and homing in on submarines. The unmanned underwater vehicle comprises a propulsion unit and at least one attachment device for attaching the vehicle to the hull of a submarine. The at least one attachment device may comprise at least one movable corkscrew and/or at least one movable permanent magnet. The at least one corkscrew may be used when the submarine hull is coated with an elastomeric material. The at least one permanent magnet may be used when the submarine hull is ferrous and uncoated or thinly coated. A method for intercepting and covertly reporting the activities of a submarine using the unmanned underwater vehicle is also described.
Description
- [0001] The invention described herein may be manufactured and used by or for the Government of the United States of America for governmental purposes without the payment of any royalties thereon or therefor.
- (1) Field of the Invention
- The present invention relates to an unmanned underwater vehicle for use in tracking and homing in on submarines.
- (2) Description of the Prior Art
- Because of where and how they operate, submarines are much easier to hide than to find. Yet in order to maintain superiority at sea, in preparation for or during international hostilities, it is imperative to know what lies beneath the waves as well as what floats or flies above them. At present, the surest method of tracking a submarine is with another submarine. However, in order to avoid counterdetection, the tracking submarine must be quieter than its adversary and/or have better sensors. Also, the tracking submarine must be small enough to follow its adversary into shallow waters. There are many other technical difficulties that make submarine-on-submarine tracking a very challenging task. In addition, using a superior submarine to track an inferior submarine involves great expense and risk for the pursuer.
- Ever since submarines were first deployed, many techniques have been used or proposed to tag and track them without risk to personnel or allocation of expensive assets. For example, mechanical noisemakers have been dropped onto shallowly submerged, steel-hulled submarines and attached via permanent magnets. This is more of a nuisance that persists only until the submarine can surface and send out a diver to remove the offending device. Tags can also be attached by a diver covertly while the submarine is in port. However, this method is ineffective if the exterior hull is inspected, as any prudent submarine commander would require, immediately prior to departure.
- There are other conventional methods of tracking submarines, but each has severe limitations. For example, high-resolution satellite cameras can see submarines, but only under certain atmospheric, oceanographic and operational conditions. Seafloor-mounted hydrophones provide only a snapshot of a submarine's location, direction, and speed. Low-flying aircraft equipped with magnetometers can detect the presence of a submarine, but maintaining continuous contact using aircraft is expensive and risky over enemy territory, and aircraft require a nearby landing area. Radar can detect a deployed submarine periscope or snorkel, but not a completely submerged vessel.
- Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide an unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV) for covertly monitoring and reporting a submarine's activities.
- It is a further object of the present invention to provide an unmanned underwater vehicle as above which can be parasitically attached to a submarine.
- It is yet a further object of the present invention to provide an unmanned underwater vehicle as above which can detach itself from a submarine.
- The foregoing objects are attained by the unmanned underwater vehicle of the present invention.
- In accordance with the present invention, an unmanned underwater vehicle is provided. The unmanned underwater vehicle broadly comprises a propulsion unit and a means for attaching the vehicle to the hull of a submarine. The attaching means comprises at least one movable corkscrew device and/or at least one movable permanent magnet.
- A method for intercepting and covertly reporting the activities of a submarine is also provided. The method broadly comprises the steps of launching an unmanned underwater vehicle from a platform in the vicinity of the submarine, targeting a particular area of the submarine suited for stealthy and long-term attachment, navigating the unmanned underwater vehicle to the targeted area, and attaching the unmanned underwater vehicle to the submarine. The unmanned underwater vehicle can then transmit a signal giving the location of the submarine.
- Other details of the unmanned underwater vehicle of the present invention, as well as other objects and advantages attendant thereto, are set forth in the following detailed description and the accompanying drawings wherein like reference numerals depict like elements.
- FIG. 1 is a schematic representation of an unmanned underwater vehicle approaching a target submarine;
- FIG. 2 is a schematic representation illustrating an unmanned underwater vehicle assuming an attachment orientation;
- FIG. 3 is a schematic representation illustrating an unmanned underwater vehicle executing a mechanical attachment to a submarine;
- FIG. 4 is a schematic representation illustrating an unmanned underwater vehicle executing a magnetic attachment to a submarine;
- FIG. 5 is a schematic representation illustrating an unmanned underwater vehicle acting as a torpedo homing beacon;
- FIG. 6 is a schematic representation illustrating an unmanned underwater vehicle detaching from a submarine; and
- FIG. 7 is a schematic representation of an unmanned underwater vehicle in accordance with the present invention.
- The present invention relates to a special-purpose, self-propelled unmanned
underwater vehicle 10 as shown in FIGS. 1-7 that may be launched from any of numerous platforms in the vicinity of asubmarine 12. Thevehicle 10 may be guided toward thesubmarine 12 by a controller 13 (See FIG. 7) using data from internal (unmanned underwater vehicle-mounted) and/or external (launch platform-mounted) sensors of various types, such as acoustic, optic, and magnetic sensors. External sensory data may be fed to thevehicle 10 through a thin, spooled, trailing wire or by using optical or other covert methods. As can be seen from FIG. 1, thevehicle 10 preferably approaches thesubmarine 12 from behind, along a tangential path, so as to avoid a collision that might alert the submarine crew and damage thevehicle 10 and its components. Thevehicle 10 will target a predetermined area of the submarine that is well suited for both stealthy and longterm attachment. - Referring now to FIG. 1, as the
vehicle 10 approaches thesubmarine 12, thevehicle 10 will match the submarine's speed and direction. This can be accomplished through adjustment of the forward thrust of thevehicle 10 and the positioning of its forward andrear control surfaces - As can be seen from FIG. 2, the
vehicle 10 has asurface 16 which is to be positioned adjacent thehull 18 of thesubmarine 12. As thevehicle 10 approaches thesubmarine 12, it maneuvers to orient thesurface 16 towards thehull 18. This maneuvering may be carried out using thecontrol surfaces thrusters 20 onboard thevehicle 10. - After being properly oriented, the
vehicle 10 brushes up against thehull 18 using one or more of several techniques.Rear control surfaces 15 andforward control surfaces 14 can induce lift in the direction of thesubmarine hull 18. Built-inthrusters 20 can act as suction devices. The shape of the underwater vehicle hull can create a venturi effect, drawing thevehicle 10 toward thesubmarine 12. Fold-outpanels 22 can be provided on the vehicle to divert water flow over thevehicle 10. As forward thrust from the vehicle's propeller(s) 25 compensates for axial drag, these methods will produce forces causing thehull 26 of thevehicle 10 to be pinned against thesubmarine 12. - With the
vehicle 10 pinned against thesubmarine hull 18 at a predetermined location and orientation, thevehicle 10 begins its attachment routine. Thevehicle 10 must be oriented so that its attachment apparatus is facing thesubmarine hull 18. The vehicle propeller(s) 25 provides forward thrust to maintain the static location of thevehicle 10 with respect to thesubmarine 12. At this point, thevehicle 10 attaches itself to thesubmarine 12, the exact attachment method depending upon the nature of the submarine's hull surface. - Many submarines are coated with a thick,
rubberlike material 30 which dampens acoustic emissions and reflections. To attach to such a material, anactuator 32 and amotor 34 inside thevehicle 10 may extend one or more corkscrew-like devices 36 through thesurface 16, as shown in FIG. 3. Thereafter, the device(s) 36 may be driven into thecoating material 30 using a twisting motion. One or two turns of the device(s) 36 should provide a sufficient foothold. This action must be done swiftly, before reactive forces push thevehicle 10 away from thehull 18. Multiple attachment points may be necessary to prevent thevehicle 10 from becoming dislodged or from rattling against thehull 18 due to turbulent water flow along thesubmarine 12. - If a submarine's outer layer is not rubberlike, it is most likely ferrous and, therefore, ferromagnetic. For this application, as shown in FIG. 4, the
vehicle 10 attaches itself to thesubmarine 12 using one or morepermanent magnets 38 residing within thevehicle hull 26. The magnet(s) 38 are driven toward thevehicle hull 26 along arotating screw 40 powered by a low-speed, high-torque electric motor 42. Magnetic attachment may also be possible if thesubmarine 12 has a sufficiently thinrubberlike coating 30. - The
permanent magnets 38 may also be used to assist in drawing thevehicle 10 toward a ferrous submarine hull during the vehicle's final approach. To increase the attractive force between thevehicle 10 and thesubmarine 12 during an approach maneuver, thepermanent magnets 38 may be briefly augmented by collocated electromagnets (not shown). High power requirements, however, would make electromagnets unsuitable for extended operation with an electrically powered unmanned underwater vehicle. - Sound will be produced when the
vehicle 10 impacts thesubmarine 12, especially if thesubmarine hull 18 is uncoated metal. To dampen this sound, and thereby reduce the likelihood of alerting the submarine crew as to the presence of thevehicle 10, sections of thevehicle 10 most likely to strike the submarine, i.e. the nose and tail, may be coated with a thin layer of soft material. - Once the
vehicle 10 has attached itself, propulsive power is provided by thehost submarine 12. Themotor 46 used to drive the propeller(s) 25 may become a generator, powered by water turning the propeller(s) 25. The generator may be used to recharge one ormore batteries 29 onboard thevehicle 10, reducing the quantity of batteries needed for a long mission. - Attached to the
host submarine 12, thevehicle 10 remains quiet and motionless except for the propeller(s) 25,drive shaft 27 and motor-generator 46. Its function is to go wherever thesubmarine 12 goes and remain undetected by the submarine crew. Thevehicle 10 may be used to collect and store data on compass bearing, speed—as indicated by the propeller turning rate—and oceanographic conditions such as depth and temperature. Thevehicle 10 may reveal its location by emitting adye marker 50 that floats to the surface and is visible from above, akin to an oil slick, or by periodically ejecting anRF beacon 52 similar in operation to an emergency position indicating radio beacon (EPIRB). An EPIRB is an RF transmitter that notifies maritime rescue services by sending a coded signal which is relayed by satellite to a ground station. When released from a submerged vessel, it rises to the surface and begins transmitting a distress call automatically. TheRF beacon 52 could also upload stored data. - The
vehicle 10 may also contain one ormore hydrophones 54 for monitoring the acoustic environment at all times. If it is decided that thehost submarine 12 must be located and destroyed, a coded acoustic signal may be transmitted to thevehicle 10 by methods which can cover large areas of ocean, such as surface ship active sonar, submarine active sonar, helicopter dip sonar, seafloor-mounted acoustic projectors, etc. Upon receiving and decoding this command, thevehicle 10 may immediately begin transmitting acoustically by means of anacoustic projector 56. It should be understood that the term “transducer” can refer to both an acoustic projector, such as 56, and an acoustic receiver, such ashydrophones 54. The term “hydrophone” refers explicitly to an acoustic receiver. The acoustic output may be of a frequency and source level that will travel great distances underwater, facilitating rapid localization of thesubmarine 12. - Once the
vehicle 10 begins transmitting, thesubmarine 12 must be localized and attacked before it has time to surface, stop moving, deploy divers, deactivate thevehicle 10, and disappear beneath the waves. It should be noted that the act of surfacing and stopping greatly increases the submarine's vulnerability, especially to attack from the air. When the hydrophone(s) 54 receive acoustic signals in the torpedo active homing frequency range, it may begin echo-repeating those signals through itsacoustic projector 56, thereby acting as a homing beacon fornearby torpedo 58 as shown in FIG. 5. - If the
vehicle 10 remains quiet, once attached it can likely remain there undetected until located visually. There is no practical way to inspect the hull of a moving or deeply submerged submarine. Hull inspections at sea, which are quite rare, must be done with the submarine almost stationary and at or near the surface. The conventional method of performing such an inspection involves divers using scuba equipment and visual aids. Assuming that one does not want thevehicle 10 to be detected, thevehicle 10 can detach itself upon completion of its mission or under speed and depth conditions that permit a visual inspection of thesubmarine hull 18. Speed can be determined by measuring vehicle propeller turning rate, using asensor 64 such as an accelerometer, a tachometer or from acoustic cues. Depth can be gauged via apressure sensor 60. - If the
vehicle 10 is attached to the submarine'srubber coating 30, it will detach itself simply by reversing the direction of theelectric motor 34 which drove the corkscrew(s) 36 into the coating. As soon as the corkscrew(s) 36 separate(s) from thehull 18, thevehicle 10 will drift away. Ifpermanent magnets 38 are employed, detachment is accomplished by driving themagnets 38 away from thesubmarine hull 18, combined with propulsive thrust to overcome the diminished yet still finite magnetic attraction between thevehicle 10 andsubmarine hull 18. In either case, separation must be executed in a controlled maneuver so as to avoid striking thesubmarine hull 18 or being sucked into its propellers. - Upon detaching from the
submarine 12, as shown in FIG. 6, thevehicle 10 will proceed far enough away to preclude its visual detection by submarine divers. Thevehicle 10 may upload stored data by releasing anRF beacon 52 and then scuttle itself. Alternatively, thevehicle 10 may traverse to a predetermined pickup point, surface with the aid of aballoon 62 inflated by gas from a pressurized flask, signal its location via an acoustic or RF link, and await recovery. - FIG. 7 provides a schematic diagram of the components of the
vehicle 10. These components are operatively connected tocontroller 13 which controls and coordinates operation of the components to provide the functionality disclosed above. - As can be seen from the foregoing description, the
vehicle 10 may be used to covertly monitor and report the activities of a submarine. Thevehicle 10 may also be used as a remotely activated, acoustic localizing beacon for anti-submarine warfare forces. Thevehicle 10 may also be used to act as an echo-repeater or other type of torpedo acoustic homing beacon. - It is apparent that there has been provided in accordance with the present invention an unmanned underwater vehicle which fully satisfies the objects, means, and advantages set forth hereinbefore. While the present invention has been described in the context of specific embodiments thereof, other alternatives, modifications, and variations will become apparent to those skilled in the art having read the foregoing description. Accordingly, it is intended to embrace those alternatives, modifications, and variations as fall within the broad scope of the appended claims.
Claims (20)
1. An unmanned underwater vehicle comprising:
a hull;
a propulsion unit joined to said hull for maneuvering said vehicle; and
an attachment means joined to said hull to attach said vehicle to a submarine.
2. A vehicle according to claim 1 wherein said attachment means comprises:
a corkscrew member rotatably joined to said hull and extendable therefrom; and
a motor joined to drive said corkscrew member.
3. A vehicle according to claim 1 wherein said attachment means comprises at least one permanent magnet located at a surface of said hull.
4. A vehicle according to claim 3 wherein said attachment device further comprises a motor joined to extend said at least one permanent magnet.
5. A vehicle according to claim 1 further comprising a resilient material coating said hull.
6. A vehicle according to claim 1 further comprising forward and rear control surfaces joined to said hull.
7. A vehicle according to claim 1 wherein said hull is shaped to create a venturi effect.
8. A vehicle according to claim 1 further comprising thrusters joined to said hull to act as suction devices.
9. A vehicle according to claim 1 wherein said propulsion unit includes at least one propeller, a motor-generator driving said at least one propeller, and a battery joined to power and be recharged from said motor-generator.
10. A vehicle according to claim 9 wherein said at least one propeller is turned by water when said vehicle is attached to said submarine and said motor-generator recharges said battery.
11. A vehicle according to claim 1 further comprising means for revealing a location of the vehicle.
12. A vehicle according to claim 11 wherein said location revealing means comprises a dye marker.
13. A vehicle according to claim 11 wherein said location revealing means comprises a floating radio frequency beacon.
14. A vehicle according to claim 1 further comprising at least one transducer positioned in said hull for monitoring the acoustic environment.
15. A vehicle according to claim 14 further comprising:
a controller joined to said transducer; and
a signal processor positioned in said hull and joined to said transducer wherein said at least one transducer is configured to act as an echo-repeater to create an acoustic homing signal for a torpedo.
16. A vehicle according to claim 1 further comprising a projector positioned in said hull for transmitting an acoustic signal.
17. A vehicle according to claim 1 further comprising:
a depth gauge positioned in said hull;
a speed sensor positioned in said hull; and
a data storage means joined to said depth gauge and said speed sensor.
18. A vehicle according to claim 17 further comprising means for uploading stored data joined to said data storage means.
19. A method for intercepting a submarine and covertly reporting the activities of the submarine comprising:
launching an unmanned underwater vehicle from a platform in the vicinity of said submarine;
targeting a particular area of the submarine suited for stealthy and long-term attachment;
navigating said unmanned underwater vehicle to said targeted area; and
attaching said unmanned underwater vehicle to said submarine.
20. The method according to claim 19 further comprising orienting the unmanned underwater vehicle with respect to a hull of the submarine in a manner to promote attachment.
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US10/267,888 US20040065247A1 (en) | 2002-10-08 | 2002-10-08 | Unmanned underwater vehicle for tracking and homing in on submarines |
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US10/267,888 US20040065247A1 (en) | 2002-10-08 | 2002-10-08 | Unmanned underwater vehicle for tracking and homing in on submarines |
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Cited By (19)
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US20050093691A1 (en) * | 2003-11-03 | 2005-05-05 | Kline John W. | Underwater device with transmitter |
WO2005118390A1 (en) * | 2004-06-03 | 2005-12-15 | Singapore Technologies Dynamics Pte Ltd | Method for changing the direction of travel of a watercraft and apparatus therefore |
US20060034463A1 (en) * | 2004-08-10 | 2006-02-16 | Tillotson Brian J | Synthetically generated sound cues |
US20060180044A1 (en) * | 2005-02-15 | 2006-08-17 | Lockheed Martin Corporation | Anti-submarine warfare cluster munitions an cluster depth charges |
US20070139223A1 (en) * | 2005-12-15 | 2007-06-21 | Honeywell International Inc. | Vehicle tracking system |
EP1834154A1 (en) * | 2004-12-17 | 2007-09-19 | Singapore Technologies Dynamics Pte Ltd. | An apparatus for altering the course of travelling of a moving article and a method thereof |
WO2008054462A2 (en) * | 2006-02-24 | 2008-05-08 | Donald Rodocker | Underwater crawler vehicle having search and identification capabilities and methods of use |
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US8502063B1 (en) * | 2012-06-12 | 2013-08-06 | The Boeing Company | Miniature torpedo |
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