Navy Tests New Unmanned Underwater Vehicle at JEBLC-FS
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (NNS) -- The U.S. Navy completed tests on the
GhostSwimmer unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV) at Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek-Fort Story (JEBLC-FS), Dec. 11.
GhostSwimmer is the latest in a series of science-fiction-turned-reality
projects developed by the chief of naval operations' Rapid Innovation Cell (CRIC) project, Silent NEMO.
Silent NEMO is an experiment that explores the possible uses for biomimetic, unmanned underwater vehicles in the fleet.
Over the past several weeks, Boston Engineering's tuna-sized device has
been gathering data at JEBLC-FS on tides, varied currents, wakes, and
weather conditions for the development of future tasks.
"GhostSwimmer will allow the Navy to have success during more types of
missions while keeping divers and Sailors safe," said Michael Rufo, director of Boston Engineering's Advanced Systems Group.
The GhostSwimmer was developed to resemble the shape and mimic the
swimming style of a large fish. At a length of approximately 5 feet and a
weight of nearly 100 pounds, the GhostSwimmer vehicle can operate in
water depths ranging from 10 inches to 300 feet.
U.S. Navy Tests the GhostSwimmer: A Shark-Like Unmanned Underwater Vehicle (UUV)
Naval Open Source INTelligence: US Navy Tests Unmanned Underwater Vehicle
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