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Submarine rescue

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rescue of personnel from a disabled submarine
RIMPAC Submarine Rescue Tabletop Exercise

Submarine rescue is the process of locating a sunksubmarine with survivors on board, and bringing the survivors to safety.[1] This may be done by recovering the vessel to the surface first, or by transferring the trapped personnel to arescue bell ordeep-submergence rescue vehicle to bring them to the surface. Submarine rescue may be done at pressures betweenambient at depth, and sea level atmospheric pressure, depending on the condition of the distressed vessel and the equipment used for the rescue. Self-rescue of submarine personnel by buoyantfree ascent at ambient pressure is consideredsubmarine escape. Survivors may requirerecompression treatment fordecompression illness.[1]

National and international services exist to facilitate the rapid response to submarine emergencies, including theNATO Submarine Rescue System, and within the US navy theUndersea Rescue Command (URC).[2]

History

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Cutaway drawing of the McCann Rescue Chamber.

The original strategy for surviving a submarine accident was to escape. The first escape systems were based on amining breathing apparatus, which was a primitive form of rebreather using asoda-lime scrubber. The system used in the first escape from a sunk submarine was the German Dräger breathing apparatus, used when the submarineU3 sank in 1911. Similar systems, such as the Royal Navy'sDavis Submerged Escape Apparatus, and the United States Navy'sMomsen lung, were adopted soon after. In 1946 an investigation by the RN found that there was no difference in survival rate between using an escape apparatus and an unaided ascent, so the free ascent was officially adopted. Free ascent required the submariner to keep an open airway throughout the ascent to avoidlung overpressure injury due to air expansion with decreasing ambient pressure.[1]

The USN adopted theSteinke hood in 1962, which is a hood with a transparent viewport attached to a life jacket, which allowed the user to rebreathe air trapped in the hood during the ascent. Free ascent and the Steinke hood were simple, but provided no environmental protection once the submariner surfaced, and many submariners in theHMSTruculent andKomsomolets incidents died at the ocean's surface due tohypothermia,heart failure, or drowning. During the 1990s most of the world’s navies using submarines replaced their escape systems with the BritishSubmarine Escape Immersion Equipment, or a variation. The SEIE is rated for escape from 185m, covers the user completely, and provides thermal protection and integral flotation that can be linked to other units on the surface.[1]

Some rescues involving recovering the whole submarine to the surface were made, but this required ideal conditions, and more often failed. The successful USSSqualus rescue using theMcCann Rescue Chamber in 1939 showed that deep rescue is possible, and provided a redirection in survival strategy thinking.[1]

Built-in escape pods have been investigated by the Russian Navy, and were considered by the US Navy before they decided on a system of deep submergence rescue vehicles which entered service during the 1970s. These were small crewed submarines which could be carried by another submarine, and deployed underwater, making them largely unaffected by surface weather conditions. The first models for the USN could carry 24 survivors. and could be airlifted to a port near to the disabled submarine and mounted on a compatible submarine vessel of opportunity.[1]

LR5 rescue vehicle is lowered into the water
NSRS in 2011.

Other navies followed this example and developed their own portable rescue capabilities. The Royal Navy’sLR5 Submarine Rescue Vehicle uses a surfacevessel of opportunity as the base of operations, and operates in conjunction with theSubmarine Parachute Assistance Group and theScorpio ROV. The SPAG team are set up to parachute into the water at the location of the incident along with air-dropped equipment pods containing rigid-hulled inflatable boats, life rafts, food, water and medical supplies to support survivors evacuating the sunken submarine.[1]

The LR5 and DSRV were due to be replaced the end of 2008. The USN developing theSubmarine Rescue Diving Recompression System and the LR5 replaced by the similarNATO Submarine Rescue System, a joint project of Britain, France and Norway. These systems are similar in concept to the Royal Australian Navy'sAustralian Submarine Rescue VehicleRemora, and carry out rescue operations in three phases: reconnaissance and possibly site preparation or delivery of emergency supplies by ROV, rescue by deep-submergence rescue vehicle, and crew decompression when needed after transfer under pressure to a surface decompression chamber.[1] There is a trend towards larger capacity rescue vehicles, which will reduce the number of locking on operations and recoveries from the water necessary.

After theKursk submarine disaster of 2000, theInternational Submarine Escape and Rescue Liaison Office (ISMERLO) was formed in 2003 to help coordinate international submarine rescue operations.[1]

During the recentTitan incident, discussions surrounding the possiblesalvaging of the submersible were raised by maritime entities;[3][4] Officials forwarded proposals for the transportation of the DSVLimiting Factor towards the last known location before diving down in search and discovery attempts,[5] an approach that would have costed millions.[6] Some however disputed the suggestion,[7] since the time quantity for theLimiting Factor to arrive, transportation logistics of the submersible to the location along with the length to rescue as well as recoverTitan led some to doubt its overall feasibility.[8] Others recommended the consideration of the remaining oxygen on boardTitan.[9] Despite the efforts, theTitan was later discovered within wreckage the subsequent days.

Timeline of submarine rescues

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This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding to it.(November 2024)
  • Mayday capsules sent from HMS K13 when it sank on the 29th January 1917
    1917: On 29 January 1917, the submarineHMSK13 sank in theGareloch inArgyll and Bute,Scotland, during sea trials with 80 people on board. About 10 hours later a vessel deployed divers who were able to communicate with the survivors. Later an airline was attached to the vessel and the ballast tanks were blown. By midday on the 31st the bows were hauled to the surface and supported by a pair of barges while a hole was cut to let the 48 survivors out.[10]
  • 1939: On 23 May theSargo-class submarineUSSSqualus sank in 240 feet (73 m) during trials at Portsmouth, New Hampshire. The sister ship USSSculpin, which was also on site, located the disabled submarine and established that there were survivors. TheMcCann Rescue Chamber was used to successfully rescue thirty-three survivors fromSqualus. At the time of theSqualus accident, Lieutenant Commander Momsen was serving as head of theExperimental Diving Unit at theWashington Navy Yard. Thesubmarine rescue shipUSSFalcon (ASR-2), commanded byLieutenant George A. Sharp, was on site within twenty-four hours. It lowered the Rescue Chamber — a revised version of a diving bell invented by Momsen — and in four dives over the next 13 hours recovered all 33 survivors in the first deep submarine rescue ever. McCann was in charge of Chamber operations, with Momsen commanding the divers.[11] The submarine was eventually raised and renamedUSS Sailfish.
  • 1973:PiscesIII, a Canadian deep-sea submersible, was trapped on the seabed at nearly 1,600 feet (490 m) in theIrish Sea on 27 August with a crew of two during a dive to lay telecommunications cable after losing buoyancy and sinking. Two similar submersibles and aremotely operated underwater vehicle eventually found thePisces III and connected two cables which were then used to lift it back to the surface. Both crew survived.[12]
  • 2005: The RussianPriz-classAS-28 mini-submarine was rescued fromBeryozovaya Bay off theKamchatka Peninsula after getting trapped at 190m in cables of the Russian coastal monitoring system on 4 August 2005. The Russian navy first tried to lift the sub then drag it to shallower water where it could be reached by divers, but the cables that fouled the propellers prevented this from working. On 7 August the BritishScorpio-45 ROV arrived and managed to cutAS-28 loose. All seven people on board survived.[13][10]

Methods

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Several methods have been used to rescue submariners from a disabled submarine lying on the bottom. Some of the methods involve a submarine rescue ship, a surface support ship for submarine rescue and deep-seasalvage operations. Methods employed include raising the submarine, a rescuein situ using theMcCann Rescue Chamber,deep-submergence rescue vehicles (DSRV's) anddiving operations.

Emergency position-indicating radiobeacon (EPIRB) is a device used by submarines to signal distress and broadcast their location to rescuers. EPIRBs are typically designed to deploy automatically if the submarine reaches a certain depth, helping rescuers locate the vessel quickly, even if it’s submerged.

The US Navy defines their rescue mission sequence to involve identifying a 'Vessel of Oppurtunity'; being a vessel capable of transporting a rescue system, and transporting the rescue system to the vessel via aircraft before dispatching the vessel to the location of the distressed submarine.[14]

Escape Immersion Equipment

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Submarine escape trunk containing Escape Immersion Equipment (orange suites)

Submarine Escape Immersion Equipment (SEIE) allows individual escape from a distressed submarine. It is a waterproof, insulated suit with a breathing system and buoyancy control to safely bring crew to the surface, protecting against cold and decompression risks.[15]

Refloating the vessel

[edit]
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This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding to it.(November 2024)

A conceptually obvious way to rescue the submariners is to recover the whole submarine to the surface, at which point the survivors can either leave through a hatch, or a hole can be cut in the hull to allow egress. In practice this is not often feasible, as it depends on availability of suitable equipment, good weather, and moderate depth.[citation needed]

Refloating Submarines has been done in salvage operations,[16] and strategic missions such asProject Azorian where a Soviet Submarine was lifted to the surface by theGlomar Explorer.[17]

Typically however, when the goal is to rescue the sailors onboard, salvaging the entire submarine is considered a secondary priority, with quicker and easier methods of rescuing the crew taking precedence.

Rescue chamber

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USN Submarine rescue chamber
Further information:Diving bell § Rescue bell, andMcCann Rescue Chamber

Diving bells have been used for submarine rescue. The closed dry bell is designed to seal against the deck of the submarine above an escape hatch. Water in the space between the bell and the submarine is pumped out and the hatches can be opened to allow occupants to leave the submarine and enter the bell. The hatches are then closed, the bell skirt flooded to release it from the submarine, and the bell with its load of survivors is hoisted back to the surface, where the survivors exit and the bell may return for the next group. The internal pressure in the bell is usually kept as close as possible to atmospheric pressure to minimise run time by reducing or eliminating the need fordecompression, so the seal between the bell skirt and the submarine deck is critical to the safety of the operation. This seal is provided by using a flexible sealing material, usually a type of rubber, which is pressed firmly against the smooth hatch surround by the pressure differential when the skirt is pumped out.[11]

TheMcCann Submarine Rescue Chamber uses a cable attached to abail on the submarine'sescape hatch by a diver or ROV to guide the bell into place and hold it steady while the space between bell and hatch is pumped clear of water, after which hydrostatic pressure holds the bell in place and a rubber seal keeps the water out while the transfer is done. As of 2008 the McCann Rescue Chamber System was still in service in several navies, including the USN, as a reserve system, along with the deep submergence rescue vehicles, and the Turkish Navy. The original system relied on adiver connecting the cable to the hatch, but this could also be done by a ROV.[11]

Crewed deep-submergence rescue vehicles

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Main article:deep-submergence rescue vehicle
The US Navy'sDSRV-1 Mystic docked to aLos Angeles-class attack submarine
DSRV 2 Avalon on D.S.R.V.L.T.V. 4 (... land transport vehicle 4) being loaded onto a C-5 freight plane for air transport.

A deep-submergence rescue vehicle (DSRV) is a type ofdeep-submergence vehicle used for rescue of downed submarines. While DSRV is the term most often used by theUnited States Navy, other nations have different designations for their equivalent vehicles.

A deep-submergence rescue vehicle has a pressure hull with internal space to carry several survivors, and the capacity to lock onto a disabled submarine's escape hatch surrounds, pump out the water from the space between its hatch and that of the submarine at a maximum operating depth which depends on the model, after which the pressure is equalised between the interiors of submarine and DSRV, the hatches are opened and survivors climb into the rescue vehicle. After transfer the hatches are sealed, the trunking is vented to the sea, and the connection released. The DSRV returns to the mother sub to repeat the locking procedure and discharge its passengers, after which it can repeat the procedure until the survivors have all been rescued. Large batteries power the electrical, hydraulic and life support systems. The vehicle has movable ballast for trim control to allow mating with the submarine at angle up to about 60 degrees from the horizontal. Most DRSVs are air transportable by large cargo aircraft, allowing rapid deployment worldwide, using a vessel of opportunity as the support ship.

Some DSRVs can be transported to the rescue site on a submarine, allowing deployment underwater where sea surface conditions are not a limitation. Several trips may be necessary to recover all personnel. Rescue is usually accomplished by ferrying survivors to the mother submarine, but they can also be taken to a suitably equipped surface support ship.

Remotely operated underwater vehicles

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CURV-21 — remotely operated underwater vehicle of the United States Navy
US Navy Deep Submergence Unit (DSU) Unmanned Vehicle Detachment (UMA Det) personnel guide the Super Scorpio remote operated vehicle (ROV) to a safe recovery

Remotely operated underwater vehicles (ROVs)are unmanned, tethered submersibles controlled from the surface. In submarine rescues, they are used to assess the submarine's condition, deliver supplies, and prepare for rescue operations. Equipped with cameras, sonar, robotic arms, and cutting tools, ROVs can attach communication lines, clear obstructions, and connect rescue equipment to the submarine's escape hatches. ROVs operate at depths beyond human divers' limits, making them essential for locating and stabilizing distressed submarines in challenging underwater conditions.[18][19][20]

Examples of ROVs include:

International co-operation

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Main article:International Submarine Escape and Rescue Liaison Office

The International Submarine Escape and Rescue Liaison Office ("ISMERLO") is an organization that coordinates internationalsubmarinesearch and rescue operations. It was established in 2003 byNATO and the Submarine Escape and Rescue Working Group (SMERWG) following the disaster of theRussian submarine K-141Kursk, to provide an international liaison service to prevent peacetime submarine accidents, and to quickly respond on a global basis if they do occur. ISMERLO has an international team of submarine escape and rescue experts based atNorthwood, UK.[21]

In modern timesNATO and ISMERLO continue to work with allies across the world to better the work on submarine rescues.[22] As of late 2024, these organizations completed "Exercise Dynamic Monarch," which is a joint exercise held with 10 nations, including Canada, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Sweden, Turkey, the United Kingdom, and the United States. This exercise allowed these nations to demonstrate their own rescue systems, such as theNSRS,[23] which is a life saving system developed by France, Norway, and the UK and which can save up to 15 patients at a time including those confined to stretchers. This vessel has the operational goal of being able to be anywhere in the world in 96 hours. The continuous combined effort of nations will further grow submarine survival rates.

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcdefghiStewart, Nick (7 July 2008)."Submarine escape and rescue: a brief history".Semaphore.
  2. ^"Undersea Rescue Command (URC) Assets".United States Navy. Retrieved2024-11-18.
  3. ^"If the missing titanic submersible is found, how could the passengers be rescued?".www.livescience.com. 21 June 2023. Retrieved2024-10-02.
  4. ^"6 urgent questions on the missing Titan submersible".www.nationalgeographic.com. Retrieved2024-10-02.
  5. ^"Only one other submersible on Earth might be able to reach missing Titan".www.jppost.com. 22 June 2023. Retrieved2024-10-02.
  6. ^Chung, Christine (21 June 2023)."Extreme Travel Rescue Operations Are Vast in Scale and Cost. Who Foots the Bill Is Murky".www.nytimes.com. Retrieved2024-10-02.
  7. ^"The search for the missing Titanic sub in maps and graphics".www.bbc.com. Retrieved2024-10-02.
  8. ^"Even if the Titan submersible is found in the deep sea, rescuers would need to somehow haul it back up. And they'd only have one shot to save everyone inside, a naval architect says".www.businessinsider.com. Retrieved2024-10-02.
  9. ^"There's still little hope that the Titan will be found".www.thespectator.com. 21 June 2023. Retrieved2024-10-02.
  10. ^abEvans, Gareth (26 March 2018)."Back from the depths: A century of submarine rescue".Naval Technology. Retrieved5 September 2022.
  11. ^abc"Vice Admiral Allan Rockwell McCann, USN".ibssg.org. Archived from the original on 2012-02-09. Retrieved2009-09-26.
  12. ^Georgiou, Aristos (6 July 2021)."The Extraordinary Story of the World's Deepest Ever Submarine Rescue".www.newsweek.com.
  13. ^"This day in history: August 07 2005: Trapped Russian sub rescued".www.history.com. A&E Television Networks. 9 February 2010. Retrieved5 September 2022.
  14. ^"US Navy Submarine Rescue Overview"(PDF).wms.org.
  15. ^bd2."FAQ Submarine Escape & Immersion Equipment | Survitec".survitecgroup.com. Retrieved2024-11-15.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  16. ^McCormick, Jinny (2017-12-12)."A Massive Operation - Raising A U-Boat To Recover Her Precious Cargo | War History Online".warhistoryonline. Retrieved2024-11-15.
  17. ^Ponjoan, Natalia (2023-10-07)."How to rescue a submarine: A challenge for today's technology that CIA spies accomplished 50 years ago".EL PAÍS English. Retrieved2024-11-15.
  18. ^Mathews, Amanda (2022-06-08)."Here's a quick start guide to underwater ROVs. Learn about what defines a remotely operated vehicle, different types of ROVs, and what they are used for".REACH ROBOTICS. Retrieved2024-11-15.
  19. ^"Underwater ROVs & What Are They Used For?".www.deeptrekker.com. Retrieved2024-11-15.
  20. ^"Submarine Rescue Systems".Forum Energy Technologies, Inc. Retrieved2024-11-15.
  21. ^"An officer of Italian Navy at the head of ISMERLO".Marina Militare. 17 July 2015. Retrieved22 November 2017.
  22. ^https://mc.nato.int/media-centre/news/2024/nato-practises-saving-lives-with-cuttingedge-submarine-rescue-capabilities-during-exercise-dynamic-monarch-24
  23. ^https://mc.nato.int/media-centre/news/2024/nato-practises-saving-lives-with-cuttingedge-submarine-rescue-capabilities-during-exercise-dynamic-monarch-24
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