Chinese scientists develop long-distance underwater communication in South China Sea

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In a field test in the South China Sea by Chinese researchers, a listening device picked up sound signals from 105kmaway at a depth of 200 metres, according to the study by the team in northwestern China. The results have implications for military and weapons communication. Photo: Shutterstock Images

 

In a field test in the South China Sea by Chinese researchers, a listening device picked up sound signals from 105kmaway at a depth of 200 metres, according to the study by the team in northwestern China. The results have implications for military and weapons communication. Photo: Shutterstock Images

 

Chinese researchers say they have developed and tested in the depths of the South China Sea underwater communication technology that would allow submarines and drones to maintain contact over more than 30,000 sq km (11,600 square miles) – about the area of Belgium.

 

A listening device picked up sound signals from 105km (65 miles) away at a depth of 200 metres (656 feet) during a field test in an important passageway for submarines, according to the study by the team at northwestern China.

 

The data transmission rate reached nearly 200 bits per second (bps), on par with the bandwidth of very low-frequency radio sent by a naval command to nuclear submarines using the world’s largest land-based antennas.

 

In a field test in the South China Sea by Chinese researchers, a listening device picked up sound signals from 105kmaway at a depth of 200 metres, according to the study by the team in northwestern China. The results have implications for military and weapons communication. Photo: Shutterstock Images

 

In a field test in the South China Sea by Chinese researchers, a listening device picked up sound signals from 105kmaway at a depth of 200 metres, according to the study by the team in northwestern China. The results have implications for military and weapons communication. Photo: Shutterstock Images

 

Chinese researchers say they have developed and tested in the depths of the South China Sea underwater communication technology that would allow submarines and drones to maintain contact over more than 30,000 sq km (11,600 square miles) – about the area of Belgium.

 

A listening device picked up sound signals from 105km (65 miles) away at a depth of 200 metres (656 feet) during a field test in an important passageway for submarines, according to the study by the team at northwestern China.

 

The data transmission rate reached nearly 200 bits per second (bps), on par with the bandwidth of very low-frequency radio sent by a naval command to nuclear submarines using the world’s largest land-based antennas.

 

The results of the South China Sea experiment proved the “effectiveness and good performance” of the new technology in increasing underwater communication range and efficiency, said project lead scientist professor Liu Songzuo, of Harbin Engineering University, one of the Chinese universities sanctioned by the US government, in a paper published in the domestic peer-reviewed journal Acta Acustica on September 6.

 

Liu and his colleagues conducted the experiment over a 3,800-metre deep sea floor located between the Taiwan-controlled Dongsha Islands, known in Taiwan as Pratas, and the hotly disputed Paracel Islands, known in mainland China as Xisha. Some military experts said the area had been an important passage for submarines in and out of waters close to China.

 

China has deployed unmanned surface and underwater vessels in the region to patrol and collect information, according to openly available information.

 

A deep-sea base for the docking and recharging of robotic drones will be up and running over the next few years in the South China Sea, according to the Chinese government’s plan.

 

Chinese researchers are also developing smart weapons that can be planted on sea beds and activated during a war, and drones powered by disposable nuclear reactors that can travel long distances in a swarm formation.

 

These AI-driven machines must stay in constant contact with one another to share intelligence, plan routes or coordinate an attack, according to researchers involved in the programmes.

Numerous technologies with “low requirements on receiving signal-to-noise ratio have been widely used in deep-sea long-distance communication and have achieved good results”, said Liu in the paper.

“However, the efficiency of these technologies is low, and the available frequency band for long-distance underwater acoustic communication is limited, resulting in a low achievable communication rate.”

 

Liu said they conducted the test on a windy day, with waves rocking the research ship while a strong sea current pulled the hydrophone array away from the best listening position. Under the water lay rough terrain with cliffs and gorges that could absorb, deflect and distort the sound waves.

 

In such a challenging environment, more than 70 per cent of the sensors were unable to pick up anything, according to the Chinese researchers.

Source: South China Morning Post

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