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Pentagon plans 'flying submarine'
Pentagon researchers are attempting to develop a military vehicle
which can travel underwater like a submarine before bursting out of
the waves and flying like an aeroplane.

By Tom Chivers
Published: 1:50PM BST 05 Jul 2010
R

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), the US military
science and technology department, has set about creating an aircraft
that can fly low over the water until near its target before
disappearing under the sea to avoid detection.

It would then creep closer in submarine form before attacking its
target, probably a ship or coastal installation, and fly home.

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New Scientist reports that the project, which has been in development
since 2008, has reached design proposal stage, and several outside
developers have submitted designs. DARPA could start allocating
funding to developers in as little as a year.

While the principles of hydrodynamic and aerodynamic flight are
similar, the technological challenges are profound. Aircraft need to
be as light as possible, so that they can use a minimum of power to
get airborne, while submarines need to be dense and strong to
withstand water pressure. Heavier-than- air aircraft get their lift
from airflow over their wings - submarines simply pump water in and
out to change their buoyancy.

One method of getting around the latter problem is to design a
submarine that is lighter than water, but - like an upside-down
aeroplane - uses lift generated by its wings to force it away from the
surface. Then, after surfacing, the wings' "angle of attack" would be
changed to generate upwards lift instead, allowing it to fly.

Graham Hawkes, a submarine designer, believes that modern lightweight
carbon fibre composites could be used to build a craft that is both
strong enough and light enough to fly above and below the water. He
has already designed and built a submersible craft called the "Super
Falcon" which uses stubby wings to "fly" down to 300 metres. He says
that if it were given jet engines and larger wings, it could fly at up
to 900kph (560mph) in the air, while still being capable of underwater
travel at around 18kph (11mph). At these speeds, the behaviour of
water and air over the control surfaces is similar. "Think about it as
flying under water," says Mr Hawkes. "It can be done. It just needs a
lot of work."

One problem could be overcome in a dramatic fashion - in order to get
the wings to start generating downward lift, the craft would have to
get underwater; but a lighter-than- water vessel would struggle to do
so. Mr Hawkes suggests copying birds: "You might have to put the nose
down and literally dive, smack, into the water. It would certainly be
spectacular. "

There are a variety of other design problems to overcome. Ordinary
batteries capable of giving the craft a 44km (28 mile) range - as
specified by DARPA - would weigh more than the rest of the vessel, but
running it on ordinary fuel would require a supply of air, meaning a
snorkel and a maximum depth of just a few meters.

Also, jet engines - which run at several hundred degrees celsius -
would most likely explode from the sudden change in temperature if
they were rapidly submerged after airborne use, but piston engines
would not survive being immersed in water. Jim McKenna, an engineer at
the UK Civil Aviation Authority, says: "You can't let cold seawater
get at a hot engine because the thermal shock will blow it apart." The
Pentagon's dream of a flying submarine is still some way away yet.