02-16-2009, 07:38 AM | #1 (permalink) | |
Eat your vegetables
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Location: Arabidopsis-ville
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Submarine Collision
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A few pressing questions come to mind as I read this article: Wouldn't they have advanced navigation systems to prevent an incident like this - how do submarines run into each other? Why were they carrying nuclear weapons in the Northern Atlantic Ocean? There aren't any wars in that part of the world that I'm aware of. Why risk carting around nukes when they will never be used?
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02-16-2009, 07:46 AM | #2 (permalink) | |
warrior bodhisattva
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Location: East-central Canada
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As far as the collision is concerned, you should always factor in human error. Technology only works when you know how to work it without fail. Sometimes it fails; sometimes the operator(s) fail(s). Yeah, this is pretty scary.
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Knowing that death is certain and that the time of death is uncertain, what's the most important thing? —Bhikkhuni Pema Chödrön Humankind cannot bear very much reality. —From "Burnt Norton," Four Quartets (1936), T. S. Eliot Last edited by Baraka_Guru; 02-16-2009 at 07:48 AM.. |
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02-17-2009, 08:05 AM | #4 (permalink) |
Kick Ass Kunoichi
Location: Oregon
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Jeez...when I start thinking about the probability of this happening (it's very, very small), and then the probability of an incident occurring wherein the nuclear warheads somehow manage to detonate (even smaller), it blows my mind that this could happen.
On CNN yesterday, it sounded as if one of the subs dented up its nose pretty badly; I think it was the French sub as I recall that they mentioned the sonar had been damaged on this vessel. Some of the payload is located in the nose. Part of the issue is that since the end of the Cold War, militaries have had a difficult time adjusting to the lack of a clear enemy. We've responded to this in the United States with the Global War on Terror (when you've gone so long with a boogeyman, it's hard to let go), but we still have protocols and practices that are more in line with what we were doing in the Cold War. Obviously, other militaries are having the same problem.
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02-17-2009, 12:27 PM | #7 (permalink) | |
The sky calls to us ...
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Location: CT
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Lewis Page has a great article in the Register that looks at it from a levelheaded approach. One thing to consider with his point on using active sonar is that it's just like the movies. When you're pinging, you're sending out an audible sound that's easy to detect, and if you ping another sub, everyone on board will hear it.
16th February 2009 Archive ? The Register Quote:
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02-17-2009, 03:12 PM | #8 (permalink) |
Eat your vegetables
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Location: Arabidopsis-ville
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Fascinating article, MSD. Thank you for sharing. It helps to clarify the overall concept of sonar and submarine tracking systems.
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"Sometimes I have to remember that things are brought to me for a reason, either for my own lessons or for the benefit of others." Cynthetiq "violence is no more or less real than non-violence." roachboy |
02-17-2009, 05:06 PM | #9 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Fort Worth, TX
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As for the navigation system... you fail to realize how good these subs are. The Modern Nuclear Attack sub is quieter than a shrimp when it's at cruising speed. The modern Nuclear Missile Submarine is even quieter. My uncle was a P3 Orion pilot (sub hunter plane), he says you don't look for their sound... you look for an abnormally quiet spot in the water. As stated before, the entire point is to NOT be seen. Subs have collided before, even those armed with Nuclear missiles. The US/Soviet submarines in the Cold War actually had quite a few run-ins, the Soviets lost one while we've had a couple damaged.
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02-18-2009, 08:30 AM | #12 (permalink) | |
Too Awesome for Aardvarks
Location: Angloland
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Either that or the captains were playing cat and mouse.
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02-18-2009, 09:58 AM | #13 (permalink) | |
Tone.
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The odds of two specific vehicles being in the same place at the same time and colliding are also vanishingly small. This does not mean that the wreck you see on the way home from work is a conspiracy or evidence of Armageddon |
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02-18-2009, 10:21 AM | #14 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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every morning i see the ocean and every morning one thing i notice about the ocean is that it is really really big.
big big big. while i understand all this secret floating about underwater blindly so as to maintain the fun and excitement of being secret, and, even as i think it's ridiculous, understand the carrying nukes around as you do that ("we have em, so we might as well sail them around") what i really don't get is how these two submarines could possibly have clunked into each other given how very very big the ocean is. i know other folk have noted this bigness factor with reference to the ocean, but i just looked at it again on the way out of essex this morning and so have a new and improved sense of the bigness of the ocean. it is really fucking big.
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02-18-2009, 10:42 AM | #17 (permalink) |
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Location: essex ma
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shakran:
i don't think it was intentional. to think that you'd have to subscribe to a version of the theory advanced by jamie brockett in that old strange song "the ballad of the uss titanic" to explain that collision. , if memory serves, ithe theory involved433 1/2 feet of rope made from hemp. while i expect that you can derive the rest of the theory, here's what i remember of it: at the critical moment, the captain of the titanic, who has just previously been passed out after smoking a length of that rope, woke up, saw the iceberg and bellowed: "I'M GONNA MOVE YOU BABY." i think the song ends just after that. what more is there to say really? but i haven't heard it since high school and am surprised that i remember as much of it as (apparently) i do. more realistically, who knows? maybe there are particular corridors where submarines like to hang out, like puppy parks for submariners where they go to frolic about and chase each other and something went awry.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite Last edited by roachboy; 02-18-2009 at 10:45 AM.. |
02-18-2009, 10:59 AM | #18 (permalink) | ||
warrior bodhisattva
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Location: East-central Canada
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Knowing that death is certain and that the time of death is uncertain, what's the most important thing? —Bhikkhuni Pema Chödrön Humankind cannot bear very much reality. —From "Burnt Norton," Four Quartets (1936), T. S. Eliot |
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02-18-2009, 11:50 AM | #20 (permalink) |
Tone.
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what Baraka said, Roach. There are corridors where subs like to go due to ease of navigation, or predictable and good thermal layers (which help keep subs hidden), or proximity to somewhere the sub is supposed to be hitting.
Also, esp. with US and Russian subs, we each know where the other country's subs like to hang out. If you were running the US submarine fleet, and you knew that Russia liked to park a nuclear missile-armed boomer in a certain place, wouldn't you send your hunter submarines over there to watch for it? So really, it's not at all surprising that submarines from different countries wind up in the same general area and that, from time to time, they run into each other. |
02-18-2009, 01:38 PM | #21 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Melbourne, Australia
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I'm fairly sure they try to follow each other, just for practice.
It's like aircraft collisions. The sky is huge.... so in theory there would be no collisions. However, military aircraft fly close to each other and crash occasionally. Although it's different reasons there. Anyways... I'd not want to travel in a previously damaged sub. |
02-18-2009, 01:58 PM | #22 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: My head.
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What is going on?? |
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02-18-2009, 03:55 PM | #23 (permalink) | |
Tone.
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The odds of any one particular sub being in any one particular place are the same as it being in any other particular place. These subs happened to be in the same place. What are the odds that I will crash into your car tomorrow? Pretty small, right? Yes, but that doesn't mean that it can't happen. Otherwise wrecks would never occur. Same with this story. Yes, the odds were very small, but there was still a chance that it would happen, as evidenced by the fact that it happened. The only other conclusion we can draw other than "It was an accident because they both happened to be there at the same time" is that it was deliberate, in which case the question would have to be posed, WHY, was it deliberately done? If you want to sink a sub, there are much more effective ways to do it than to ram into it at very slow speeds. That's why submarines have torpedos. |
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02-18-2009, 06:09 PM | #24 (permalink) |
The sky calls to us ...
Super Moderator
Location: CT
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Is it really that hard to believe thatthe captains of two equivalent subs, serving two advanced navies, very likely with almost identical training, looked at the same spot and said, "that looks like a good place to chill"?
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02-18-2009, 08:04 PM | #25 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Fort Worth, TX
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Um... forgive me if I'm wrong... but it doesn't say where in the Atlantic it happened. Is it so odd if they ran into each other near the Straights of Gibraltar? Yeah it's a big ocean... but they have intersections.
Aside from that, subs travel with a certain level of buffer between them and the ocean floor. In addition, they like to find trenches and valleys which further mask their signal. Saying it's 1:1k chance is like saying aircraft colliding is equal chance in trans-ocean flight as hovering over an airfield. There are certain areas of high-traffic which increase likelihood.
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02-19-2009, 06:51 AM | #27 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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what i learned from this:
"Le Triomphant" serait plus endommagé qu'annoncé - Europe - Le Monde.fr is (a) these submarines were frolicking about together in the context of manoevers, which for reasons obscure the uk spokesmodel cited in the earlier article had decided to be coy about. this reduces puzzlement over the bigness of the ocean as such by providing some other framework for thinking about proximity and frolicking in the way that fully armed nuclear submarines will, apparently, frolic, much in the way that flipper once did on television except with nuclear weapons on board and a nuclear reactor too. i also learned that the french sub was pretty heavily fucked up by the encounter, much more than had previously been admitted. i also learned that the french sub is one of two of this generation of submarines, but will for quite some time be the lonely, sad nuclear submarine with nuclear weapons on board and a nuclear powered engine as well that will not be able to go out and frolick with its other fully-armed nuclear submarine buddies. poor lonely and sad fully armed nuclear submarine.
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02-19-2009, 09:02 AM | #29 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: My head.
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C'mon man!!! |
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02-19-2009, 09:33 AM | #30 (permalink) | |
Tone.
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You seem to think that the odds are zero, that two submarines could be in the same place at the same time. This is not true, even if you dismiss the hard evidence we have that you are wrong seeing as how two of them ran into each other. Besides which, your point does not seem to make a whit of sense. What are you suggesting here? The odds of the subs running into each other are too great (which you incorrectly seem to take to mean that it cannot happen) and therefore . . . What? It didn't happen? It did happen but it was on purpose? Something else happened and they're only claiming the subs ran into each other? What alternative are you suggesting in order to justify what you're saying in here? My point about the automobiles is not that wrecks cannot happen. It is that wrecks can and do happen, even though the odds of one specific car being in the same place at the same time as another specific car are vanishingly small. If the odds were not vanishingly small, you'd wreck every time you left your driveway. Even though the odds of this happening are vanishingly small, we do not run around and say "holy shit! The odds of those two specific cars colliding are so small. . What's going on here! It's a bloody conspiracy!" The same point applies to the submarines. |
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02-19-2009, 09:51 AM | #31 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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generally arguments from probability are so much fun once something has happened: the probability of what just happened happening is 1, yes?
just saying.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
02-19-2009, 10:12 AM | #33 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: In the land of ice and snow.
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Yep. I mean, the odds that the ether would coalesce into our universe are astronomically small-- that proves that there is at god a work. Or something.
The odds of anything happening ever are vanishingly small if you examine them from the proper vantage point. Within that context, one in a million billion, billion doesn't seem that bad. |
02-19-2009, 10:18 AM | #34 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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well, we're talking about these two submarines not all submarines...and they collided. so for those two submarines, it'd be 1.
at any rate, what puzzled me up front about the collision was cleared up by the article in le monde, which actually says "there were manoevers happening..." so there was a reason for the subs to be around each other. so the big big big ocean thing became less a factor. speaking for myself, at least some of the goofing about this situation is motivated by the fact that these were nuclear submarines and were fully armed. while i know that the weapons themselves are not set up to detonate without a particular command sequence, the engines seem more problematic to me. and there's something alarming in general about 2 nuclear anythings crashing into each other. just now, i was almost run over by a fedex truck. that alarmed me. but this collision alarmed me more.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
02-19-2009, 10:41 AM | #36 (permalink) |
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the probability that it /did/ happen is 1 because it happened. The probability that they /will/ collide is still vanishingly small (otherwise as soon as they got repaired, they'd go out to sea and hit each other again)
As for nuke boats hitting each other, there really isn't a whole lot of risk of a nuclear incident. In the first place, the Kursk did not cause nuclear fallout, and its wreck was a lot worse than this one. The reactors are very, very tough, and a collision at sea will not make them explode. Even if the fissile material is exposed t o the ocean, nothing much will happen. The ocean is the world's biggest cooling tank. The minuscule amount of radioactive material in a submarines reactor vessel would cause no noticeable effects to the environment of the ocean, certainly not on a long-term basis. Probably the worst nuclear accident on a sub happened in a bay in Russia in the 80's. A refueling accident caused the nuclear fuel to explode, taking the reactor and part of the ship with it, and spewing radioactive debris all over the harbor and dock. Within 7 months, radiation levels in the harbor were back to normal. And that's in a sheltered, enclosed body of water. In the depths of the ocean, you'd barely notice it. In fact, the old style submarines (and other naval vessels - -Aircraft carriers are nuclear too) would cause more damage because they had diesel engines that had to run often to keep the batteries charged, and that pollutes the oceans in a big way. I'm not a fan of nuclear myself, but it is the best solution, especially for submarines if you don't want them to have to surface all the time to snorkel air. As far as what happened to the reduction of weapons. . .There already has been a reduction of weapons. That's why nuclear missile launch sites in the Dakotas, Florida, and elsewhere are abandoned (some having been converted into private homes). The reduction is pretty meaningless, however. If I have a revolver, and I remove 5 bullets, leaving one, and then hold it up to your head, are you gonna feel any safer that I've complied with arms reduction? No, because you're still gonna die if I pull the trigger. Last edited by shakran; 02-19-2009 at 10:43 AM.. |
02-19-2009, 11:16 AM | #37 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: My head.
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a) My point was, your wrong ... plain and simple. It doesnt matter about a specific sub, what matters is two monoliths of navigation FAILED TO NAVIGATE!! b) I want to know why they ran into each other, and no, it was not an accident. c) Were not all crazy just because we assume WE DONT KNOW WHATS A-HAPPENING. Last edited by Xerxys; 02-19-2009 at 11:16 AM.. Reason: spelling!! |
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02-19-2009, 11:58 AM | #39 (permalink) | |||
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2) You are confusing the navigator with the sonar operator. 3) They navigated just fine. They just happened to navigate into the same place at the same time. Quote:
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02-19-2009, 09:50 PM | #40 (permalink) | |
Psycho
Location: the center of the multiverse
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collision, submarine |
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