China has reportedly achieved a breakthrough in underwater technology that may allow submarines or torpedoes to travel at extremely high speeds.
A report published late last month by Hong Kong’s South China Morning Post claims that scientists at the Harbin Institute of Technology in northeastern China’s Heilongjiang province have come up with a method to create an “air bubble” that will reduce friction or drag underwater.
Theoretically, a submarine or torpedo utilizing this technology could reach supersonic speeds of about 5,800km/h, which would cut a transatlantic underwater journey to less than an hour and a transpacific journey to about 100 minutes.
The Chinese research is based on a Soviet-era military technology called supercavitation, which had been used in Russia’s Shakval torpedoes to make them capable of traveling at speeds of up to 370km/h.
Vassily Kashin from the Moscow-based Center for Analysis of Strategies and Technologies told the Voice of Russia that China has been investing heavily in supercavitation research as a part of the current project, which he said is almost “mythical” in nature.
The Latest on: Supercavitation
[google_news title=”” keyword=”Supercavitation” num_posts=”10″ blurb_length=”0″ show_thumb=”left”]
via Google News
The Latest on: Supercavitation
- China has reportedly made progress on a laser-powered submarine projecton April 25, 2024 at 5:51 am
Chinese scientists have achieved a groundbreaking advancement in submarine propulsion systems with the development of a laser-engineered, supersonic, and silent submarine.
- China Claims New Breakthrough in Laser Propulsion Could Lead to Ultrafast, Stealth Submarineson April 25, 2024 at 5:27 am
Chinese scientists claim a breakthrough in laser propulsion that could transform submarine technology and shift global naval power dynamics.
- Nature-Inspired Submarine Glider: Manta Ray to Revolutionize Ocean Missionson April 24, 2024 at 1:04 pm
Laser pulses are used in propulsion to cause "supercavitation," which vaporizes seawater and forms bubbles, lowering water resistance. This breakthrough may enable submarines to travel faster than ...
- Scientists close in on new technology that uses lasers to propel submarineson April 24, 2024 at 7:02 am
A team of university engineers is closing in on a new technology that will enable submarines to reach speeds as fast as a jet engine.
- What is Beijing up to? Chinese military close to creating submarines that are powered by laseron April 23, 2024 at 4:05 am
A team of Chinese engineers from Harbin, where China’s first experimental submarine was developed, claim that the country’s military is working on a technology, that effectively using lasers to genera ...
- China Closing In On Laser-Propelled Fast, Stealth Subson April 23, 2024 at 12:56 am
China may be moving closer to the holy grail of submarine stealth technology – a propulsion system with no mechanical moving parts. Such technology ...
- Chinese scientists claim they’ve figured out how to power stealth submarines with laserson April 22, 2024 at 12:07 pm
Chinese scientists at Harbin Engineering University have developed a laser propulsion system that promises a new era of submarine technology. Rather than using a propulsion shaft and propellers, the ...
- China Working on Super-Fast Submarines Powered by Laserson April 22, 2024 at 12:04 pm
Sub It Out In China, scientists are developing technology that uses lasers to propel submarines nearly as fast as a jet engine. As the South China Morning Post reports, engineers at the Harbin ...
- Chinese scientists close in on laser propulsion for superfast, silent submarineson April 22, 2024 at 9:00 am
Breakthrough overcomes decades-old problem of how to harness the technology to propel underwater vessels, according to paper.
- The Future of Submarine Warfare? Chinese Laser Tech Could Propel Subs at Unprecedented Rateson April 22, 2024 at 8:30 am
Chinese scientists have improved laser propeller efficiency, potentially transforming underwater watercraft propulsion, enabling unprecedented speeds and reducing water resistance without mechanical ...
via Bing News