Everything about Nuclear Submarine totally explained
A nuclear submarine is a ship powered by
atomic energy that travels primarily underwater, but also on the surface of the
ocean. Previously,
conventional submarines used diesel engines that required air for moving on the surface of the water, and battery-powered electric motors for moving beneath it. The limited lifetime of electric batteries meant that even the most advanced conventional
submarine could only remained submerged for a few days at slow speed, and only a few hours at top speed. On the other hand, nuclear submarines consume a relatively small amount of fuel. Because they carry their energy source with them, current generations of nuclear submarines will never need to be refuelled throughout their 25-year lifespans, meaning they can sail around the world 40 times without surfacing. This ability, combined with advanced weapons technology, makes nuclear submarines one of the most useful
warships ever built.
History
Both
US and
USSR were pursuing the technologies to build a nuclear submarine to overcome the limitations of conventional submarines. Nuclear-powered submarines are one of the most potent symbols of the bygone U.S.-Soviet arms race.
The US headed the way and launched the
USS Nautilus, the first nuclear submarine. USS Nautilus could circle the world underwater for up to four months without refuelling.
Construction of Nautilus was made possible by the successful development of a nuclear propulsion plant by a group of scientists and engineers at the
Naval Reactors Branch of the
Atomic Energy Commission. In
July of
1951, the
US Congress authorized construction of the world's first nuclear powered submarine, under the leadership of Captain Hyman G. Rickover, USN.
Admiral Rickover came up with the idea of nuclear submarines. The Westinghouse Corporation was assigned to build its reactor. After the submarine was completed, President
Harry S. Truman broke the traditional bottle of champagne on Nautilus' bow. On
January 17, 1955, it began its sea trials after leaving its dock in Groton,
Connecticut. The submarine was 320 feet long, and cost about $55 million.
The
Soviet Union soon followed the
United States in developing nuclear-powered submarines in the 1950s. Stimulated by the US development of the
Nautilus nuclear submarine, Soviet work on nuclear propulsion reactors began in the early 1950s at the Institute of Physics and Power Engineering, in
Obninsk, under Anatoliy P. Alexandrov, later to become head of the
Kurchatov Institute. In 1956, the first Soviet propulsion reactor designed by his team began operational testing. Meanwhile, a design team under Vladimir N. Peregudov worked on the vessel that would house the reactor. After overcoming many obstacles, including steam generation problems, radiation leaks, and other difficulties, the first nuclear submarine based on these combined efforts entered service in the Soviet Navy in 1958.
At the height of the Cold War, approximately five to ten nuclear submarines were being commissioned from each of the four Soviet submarine yards (Sevmash in
Severodvinsk, Admiralteyskiye Verfi in
St. Petersburg, Krasnoye Sormovo in
Nizhniy Novgorod, and Amurskiy Zavod in
Komsomolsk-na-Amure).
From the late 1950s through the end of 1994, the
Soviet Union, and later
Russia, built a total of 245 nuclear submarines, more than all other nations combined.
Today, six countries deploy some form of nuclear-powered strategic submarines: the
United States,
Russia,
France, the
United Kingdom,
India, and
China. Several other countries, including
Argentina and
Brazil, have ongoing projects in different phases to build nuclear-powered submarines.
Technology
The main difference between the standard submarine and the nuclear submarine is the power supply system. Nuclear submarines deploy nuclear reactors to drive the main propeller shaft, which provides the forward and reverse thrust in the water. The reactor uses highly enriched fuel to allow it to deliver a large amount of energy from a smaller reactor. The nuclear reactor also supply energy to the submarine in order to maintain the air quality, maintain a fresh water supply by distilling the salted water from the ocean, maintain the temperature, etc.
Further Information
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