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Royal Navy says quantum navigation test a success

thequantuminsider.com

430 points by ninacomputer 3 years ago · 278 comments

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jchallis 3 years ago

This is the most obvious practical application of my PhD topic. A Bose Einstein Condensate is an extremely sensitive detector of gravity- a nuclear submarine could use it to make an ultra-accurate map of the world based on variations in the gravitational constant g. This would remove one of the primary reasons subs need to surface , in order to GPS lock.

It’s a naval chart that would not require surfacing.

A French postdoc in my lab swore this was the moneymaker for our entire subfield, and it seems he was on to something …

  • jedc 3 years ago

    Former submariner here with a quibble on this:

    > one of the primary reasons subs need to surface , in order to GPS lock

    While getting a GPS position is helpful, the primary reason a submarine goes to periscope depth regularly is for communications. The Navy needs to send information to submarines and know that they'll get it and take action within a certain timeframe. That's by far the primary driver.

    • eyko 3 years ago

      From layman to former submariner, a very silly question I've always wondered about and that I now have the rare chance to ask someone with some expertise: Do submarines mostly roam about or do they tend to stay relatively quiet/idle? I always imagined submarines constantly moving about but at the same time it feels like a waste of fuel.

      • jedc 3 years ago

        Ohio-class submarines (the ones that carry missiles): when they're "on station" they're just tooling around staying as quiet as they can. There's a relevant phrase for them: "Three knots to nowhere"

        Los Angeles and Virginia-class submarines are always doing something: doing exercises, transiting from one location to another, etc. And typically multiple things at once. While the boat is transiting from an exercise area to homeport, the team is doing engineering drills, or other kinds of training. Or the forward part of the boat is doing exercises with a carrier battle group while the engineering team is doing engineering drills. (There's ALWAYS engineering drills or maintenance happening.)

        Fuel isn't a primary concern: a nuclear reactor is fueled for the life of the boat, so 30-ish years. That said, effective life of a reactor is something the Navy tracks closely, and depending on the life of the boat, the life left in the reactor, some boats are decommissioned as they get close to the end of their fuel life, and others get re-fueled. (And in the case of the USS San Francisco, who had recently been refueled before it hit an underwater mountain, they cut off the front half of the submarine and welded the front half of a recently-decommissioned submarine on, because the reactor and fuel was too valuable to go to waste)

        • ateng 3 years ago

          What about diesel boats? They are exclusively attack subs but fuel is relatively limited.

          • jedc 3 years ago

            The US doesn't have diesel boats anymore. Though other countries (like Australia) do.

      • jwithington 3 years ago

        French (& American and Royal Navy) submarines are nuclear powered. No fuel necessary.

        They do have measures of "nuclear fuel" remaining, but it lasts about 30 years (at least in the American boats) so generally doesn't impact day-to-day considerations.

      • gresrun 3 years ago

        While I'm 100% positive the details of operational concerns like this are classified, there are 2 distinct types of submarines today with 2 different objectives:

        1) Attack Submarines (e.g. Los Angeles-class & Virginia-class for USN) which usually roam within a designated operations area, surveilling, tracking, and generally keeping tabs on other nations' surface & sub-surface fleet dispositions. These subs typically have multi-week sorties and may intermittently surface for surveillance & comms.

        2) Ballistic Missile Submarines aka "Boomers" (e.g. Ohio-class for USN) which are given a strategic area in which to operate and their objective is to remain silent & undetected, waiting for the hopefully-never-coming order to launch their SLBMs. These subs usually have multi-month sorties and often don't surface until the end of their patrol.

        • ThinkBeat 3 years ago

          Clearly the Ballistic Missile Submarines surfaces intermittently surface for comms as well? If not, they won't know when to set off their missiles making then not very useful as a deterrent

          I have often wondered how close to the surface they need to get.

          I would presume retractable antennas could be extended from a sub from a non-trivial depth. Or cable attached to buoys Or something much smarter that I have not thought about yet.

      • oynqr 3 years ago

        Layman here as well, but there are probably no fuel concerns because the reactors are constantly running anyway.

      • thatguy0900 3 years ago

        I wonder what the fuel difference is between fighting the currents and generating electricity while staying in the same area VS just moving around

        • jedc 3 years ago

          The main thing is that you need to be moving at least a few knots in order for your control surfaces (rudder, forward planes, stern planes) to work.

    • timthelion 3 years ago

      Do military subs have antenna buoys on cables that they can raise up without having to surface?

      • nradov 3 years ago

        Yes, modern subs typically carry comms buoys. Some are tethered and allow for two-way communication. Others are transmit only and float up to the surface independently.

      • jedc 3 years ago

        antenna buoys on cables? No.

        But there are VLF antennas that Ohio-class submarines have to receive low-data-rate comms while submerged.

        Any reasonable communications have to be made while at periscope depth. (Which is subtly different than "having to surface"... at PD just the thin mast is out of the water.)

  • otikik 3 years ago

    A submarine itself is quite massive, and has big moving parts (e.g. the rotor). The crew has less mass, but it would be very close, and also in constant movement. Wouldn’t this interfere with those measurements? Would they need to stop the engine and play “frozen TikTok” while the measurement device is active?

    • samus 3 years ago

      Surely the influence of some of these sources of noise can be modeled and filtered out. A University of Vienna currently conducts experiments to measure the gravitational force at very small sales, and they already have to do this with things like crowds moving about the city during rush hours.

      • westurner 3 years ago

        Sources of Noise?!

        Doesn't that mean that the gravitational field is an information storage and transmission medium; a signal channel?

        Is it lossy?

        Is there a routable signal path to block harassing calls?

        Is it slower or cheaper than nonlocal entanglement; like quantum radar?

        What is the minimum energy necessary to cause a propagating thresholdable-as-binary pertubation of a gravitational field?

    • JumpCrisscross 3 years ago

      > Wouldn’t this interfere with those measurements

      Towed sensors and multiple passes over known calibration zones?

    • kryogen1c 3 years ago

      > big moving parts (e.g. the rotor)

      The shaft and screw are confined to the end of the sub. A navigation instrument like this would not be in the engineroom.

    • RobotToaster 3 years ago

      Mount it on a UUV?

  • rtkwe 3 years ago

    It'd be interesting to see if they're sensitive enough to do the opposite detect the gravity anomaly that is the sub. There's a couple near future submarine warfare books where that's one of the devices used to attempt to find subs.

    • Karliss 3 years ago

      Gravity force is proportional to mass and the average density of submarine is close to water density so (possibly slightly less as positive bouyancy is preferable for safety reasons) so gravity force produced by submarine should be very close to the equivalent volume of water. So instead of detecting big chunk of metal (which is still relatively small for the scale of gravity), sensor would have to be sensitive enough to detect mass distribution within submarine or the minor density difference due to slight positive bouyancy.

    • djyaz1200 3 years ago

      I suspect that may be what these satellites are doing... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GRACE_and_GRACE-FO#:~:text=As%....

      • earthscienceman 3 years ago

        I love when HN commenters get out of water on topics. The GRACE retreivals to reconstruct mass changes for "mascons" that are several hundred kilometers in width\height take a month of static overpasses and incredible mathematics and signal processing. There is absolutely no way that their data could be used to locate a submarines, ever.

        • refulgentis 3 years ago

          Lolll it’s my fave, especially when it’s after a sibling comment that explains “uh no” using ~7th grade science

      • gitfan86 3 years ago

        Interesting, seems hard to zero out the clouds and air density, and bodies of water

    • QQ00 3 years ago

      Would love to see a list of such books.

      • rtkwe 3 years ago

        The main one I've read is Joe Buff's Deep Sound Channel series, found it after a recommendation from someone else on HN even so glad to continue the chain. Fell off it a bit in book 4 but that might have been me burning out on them, I ripped through the first 3 and focused too hard on them.

        • QQ00 3 years ago

          Thank you so much, I love when people recommend good books to me.

  • 1nf_ 3 years ago

    The majority of INS platform drift is from a thing called "tilt error" - where the IRS initially misjudges the exact direction of the gravitational vector during alignment. All this will do is improve the accuracy of the accelerometers but will still have the drift caused in the INS itself. How will this make such a large improvement over what we have already?

    • beambot 3 years ago

      Let's use a magnetometer as an example. Inertial navigation system (INS) is just using the magnetometer as a compass, so errors in bearing accumulate over time. Instead, if you built a map of magnetic field strength, the slight spatial variation of field strength would let you precisely localize on the map.

      In robotics parlance, this is the difference between dead reckoning versus SLAM (simultaneous localization and mapping).

      • mc32 3 years ago

        Then it looks like underwater landslides, volcanoes and earthquakes could throw things off from time to time.

        • Retric 3 years ago

          Traditional dead reckoning is reasonably accurate over moderate timescales in the mostly empty ocean as subs are big/stable and relatively slow. Thus the existing approach of only occasionally surfacing for GPS. This is therefore more a supplement as being able to regularly recenter even a few times a day is good enough.

        • fho 3 years ago

          I would assume that you'd use that data in conjunction with others (sensor fusion / kalman filter).

          Wenn you know you were at location X 10 minutes ago and now one sensor tells you you are at Y ... You can reasonably assume that that sensor is wrong.

        • ta988 3 years ago

          Doesn't matter just take into account what didn't move. you don't have to recalibrate at each instant.

      • bluGill 3 years ago

        The earths magnetic field is not constant. I don't know how much it changes, but I know magnetic north drifts a bit every year. And every once in a while the field reverses (IIRC we are like 10k years overdue for a reversal if we read the history of them right - a lot of guesses go into that of cousre)

        • AndrewKemendo 3 years ago

          There’s nothing saying that you can’t do a re-localization or remapping path with basically infinite frequency, or any frequency that we know that there is variance around. At a minimum then, it becomes a better standard for which other things can bear on.

        • bequanna 3 years ago

          Right, but it seems it is constant enough in the near term for practical purposes.

          • bluGill 3 years ago

            I didn't mean to imply that it wasn't useful for practical purposes. That is what the article is about. I just meant to point out that there are limits and disadvantages to work around. I'm expecting to make this useful they will have to have a team to constantly remap the earth, and send those updates to whoever needs the information.

    • underdeserver 3 years ago

      The accuracy of the reading determines the error. If today's error is so large that you have to resurface for GPS several times a day to reset it, maybe this can lower that error so you only have to resurface several times a month.

      Huge game changer if true.

      • pc86 3 years ago

        Especially if it means you can go into enemy territory for days or even weeks before exiting to friendly or international waters to surface and reset.

    • throwawaylinux 3 years ago

      It's not dead reckoning, it's continually fixing to a map.

    • elbigbad 3 years ago

      Can you talk more about this source of error? When I google this, your post is the main thing that comes up for the term…

      • bumby 3 years ago

        A long, long time ago I used to work as a technician in a shop that aligned INS for aircraft (although I didn't work on them myself). I think what the OP is referring to is that during the alignment process, the assumption is that the acceleration due to gravity is always perpendicular to the INS gimbal frame. So if there are any errors in the INS leveling during alignment, they can cause errors in the INS calibration. I assume this is what the OP means by "tilt error" (although this is the first time hearing of the term). These errors then get compounded during use. You can look up INS alignment processes for more information.

  • sampo 3 years ago

    > It’s a naval chart that would not require surfacing.

    Other sources say this is about inertial navigation, not based on charts.

    "Accelerometers measure how an object’s velocity changes over time. With this, and the starting point of the object, the new position can be calculated."

    https://www.imperial.ac.uk/news/188973/quantum-compass-could...

    • George83728 3 years ago

      What's the difference between measuring accelerations and measuring gravity?

      I think with any INS system, if you want to be very accurate you need charts of gravitational anomalies. So these seem like one and the same to me.

      • rcxdude 3 years ago

        There isn't any inherent difference (indeed, you can do some coarse gravity surveys by basically watching the drift of an IMU relative to GPS), but there's a pretty big difference in terms of the parameters of your sensor. Most gravimeters don't make for good accelerometers and vice-versa. One of the biggest reasons being dynamic range: most gravimeters are only able to sense a very small range around 1g, which means they quickly saturate when there's any significant motion. I don't know if that's something which these quantum sensors can work around, however. (Also, you need a gyro good enough to go along with those accelerometers, which may still be a challenge)

  • rogers18445 3 years ago

    What would you do with the g measurement to get your location? Can g deltas be matched to sea floor contour maps? Otherwise it seems like subs would have to be following g-mapped routes.

    • etrautmann 3 years ago

      With a highly detailed map, it becomes a statistical fitting problem, to locate yourself based on an estimate of position history using intertidal measurements and your time history of gravitational measurements, starting from an initial position estimate. I would imagine this could be quite accurate.

    • jchallis 3 years ago

      A typical sub drifts by only a few tens of meters per day - obviously this builds up . The point of the BEC gravity map is to reduce this inaccuracy an order of magnitude, thereby extending the subsurface range of the subs.

      • rogers18445 3 years ago

        But how would you do this? Sensor fusion with inertial sensors is well understood, how do you fuse g into the equation to improve things?

        • themeiguoren 3 years ago

          By having a base map of the gravity of the ocean floor. Picture a contour map, but for values of g.

          Same as if you were navigating based on a physical contour map of the ocean floor, except that getting an accurate depth like that in deep waters isn’t possible, and in shallow waters requires sonar.

    • wongarsu 3 years ago

      I'd assume features below the sea floor have a much bigger impact than surface features. Large iron deposits, volcanic activity, natural gas deposits, whatever the LLSVPs are, etc. But you could use ships to correlate gravity measurements with GPS locations and make an accurate map that way. You don't need to map the entire ocean, just enough locations to allow subs to occasionally recalibrate their position.

  • crispyambulance 3 years ago

    I don't understand how this would work.

    Do we somehow already have that super-accurate "map of g"? Wouldn't one already have to exist to be able to use quantum navigation? Moreover, would it not also require integration with a gyro and a lot of history to be able to know, for instance, which place it's at of many in any given ocean where g = 9.8100023?

    Does g really vary that much that you can figure out where you are with it with sufficient accuracy to do military stuff?

  • themodelplumber 3 years ago

    Fascinating. Q for you since you are so clued in.

    I am a ham radio operator and was thinking about novel forms of signal propagation.

    I landed on the idea of gravitons. Could gravitonic signal propagation be done somehow? While researching, I keep coming across familiar terms I know from radio land.

    Just curious if the fields here could be harnessed for communication. Thanks.

    • jchallis 3 years ago

      The big big downside of gravity waves is that they have no dipole radiators - with electric charge you have + and - and that allows very efficient propagation. For gravity there is only one charge ,and this allows only quadrupole radiation - making it extremely awful for transmission.

      • yodon 3 years ago

        Yes, but there is no dispersion relation or absorption by the interstellar medium (not directly related to the quadrupole nature, but that which makes a radiation hard to detect also makes it hard to interfere with).

    • _joel 3 years ago

      The detectors are such precision instruments it took over 10 years of calibration until they even had the first detection. Maybe some far off comms network could use them, but I doubt anytime soon. I wonder if you could use erasure codes with them too :)

      • comboy 3 years ago

        Accelerating star-like masses to 99% speed of light in a few seconds also seems somewhat less efficient than your typical FM transceiver.

    • conradev 3 years ago

      The Three-Body Problem science fiction series involves gravitational waves. I’m not going to spoil it, but the series is a great read :)

      Not quite possible today, though, as others have pointed out

    • JumpCrisscross 3 years ago

      Aren’t neutrinos holy grail for signals?

    • HyperSane 3 years ago

      Gravity waves are way too hard to detect and generate to be used for communication. The waves we can just barely detect too 8 solar masses worth of energy to generate.

      • johndunne 3 years ago

        Remember that that 8 solar mass gravity wave source is potentially 100’s millions of light years away. A sci-fi author could conjure up a ‘portable box’ containing a couple of orbiting micro-scopic black holes in a box to generate gravity wave signals someone somewhere in the solar system could pick up with a portable LIGO device. Consider this comment a patent on the idea :-)

      • multjoy 3 years ago

        And people complained about next door's aerial farm!

  • L_226 3 years ago

    Yeah, and if you put one in some kind of "spy balloon" you could also use it to map secret underground structures that may or may not exist in certain parts of the US ;)

  • andromeduck 3 years ago

    Yup and it's called is called Terrain Contour Matching!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TERCOM

    • smilespray 3 years ago

      Isn't this the old radar terrain mapping system codnamed FINGERPRINT?

      It's conceptually similar, but they didn't use quantum gravity mapping in the 50s.

      • andromeduck 3 years ago

        Think so? I don't find anything on Google. I thinkOme documentary said it was called SLAM on the tomahawk?

  • comboy 3 years ago

    > This would remove one of the primary reasons subs need to surface , in order to GPS lock.

    Huh? Wouldn't it be enough to send some small thing connected by thin wires or wirelessly to the submarine (lasers, ultrasound, whatever) that could aquire location and communicate it? Given military budgets it could probably even be disposable.

    Leaving beacons in areas of interest also seems like a good idea. With good encryption their signal could be indistinguishable from noise happening around it.

    • dmos62 3 years ago

      Both these things are probably already being done to some extent. Submarine broadcast stations for navigation were definitely talked about a lot. Note that military submarines is a secretive field, so you ever know only so much.

    • vl 3 years ago

      They raise beacons which communicate via laser with satellites, thus avoiding giving away position from radio or audio.

      They use audio for short-range underwater communication, but this has side effect of giving away position.

      US also built giant ELF (extra low frequency) transmitter to send orders to subs which operated till 2004.

      Fun fact: subs have all necessary codes to launch nuclear strike on board since there is no way to transmit these code to them if they are submerged.

    • monocasa 3 years ago

      You don't want to send out beacons like that from your nuclear sub. Your adversaries can detect those, which negates the purpose of having a nuclear sub in the first place.

      Additionally if they communicate through radio, you're back to the same problem because it's the thousand feet of water that blocks most radio waves. If they communicate via ultrasound you've just tied your sub to a nearby active sonar source. If they communicate via laser you have to be very close otherwise the power of the laser creates sonar detectable variations in the water near the sub.

    • George83728 3 years ago

      > Wouldn't it be enough to send some small thing connected by thin wires or wirelessly to the submarine (lasers, ultrasound, whatever) that could aquire location and communicate it?

      They do, using either tethered buoys or 'buoyant cable antennas' (the cable is the antenna and is itself buoyant) They can use these without coming to periscope depth, or even slowing down.

  • paulmd 3 years ago

    > A Bose Einstein Condensate is an extremely sensitive detector of gravity- a nuclear submarine could use it to make an ultra-accurate map of the world based on variations in the gravitational constant g

    it would seem the Total Perspective Vortex has obvious military applications

    https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Total%20Pers...

  • fho 3 years ago

    May I ask: how sensitive?

    Sensitive enough to, say, detect the movement of something moving at a known frequency on the other side of the planet?

    Are we on the edge of gravitation based communication channels?

    • hwillis 3 years ago

      Local surface gravity varies by up to a ten-thousandth, about .001 m/s: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gal_(unit)

      Sensitive detectors can measure differences in hundreds of millionths (10^-8 parts) or around .1 um/s^2.

      A 1 million tonne mass on the other side of the earth will create a TOTAL acceleration of 4*10^-16. Changes in that will not be detectable.

      • fho 3 years ago

        Ah yes ... That's some orders of magnitude too much :-)

    • white_dragon88 3 years ago

      I would imagine that there is is an insane amount of gravitational noise from things like the planet’s asymmetry and events occurring all the way from the core to the crust, the ocean… to cut through that noise you need one big thumper.

      • martopix 3 years ago

        The most obvious source of noise seems to me the fact that the submarine is moving and has therefore nonzero accelerations all the time

      • fho 3 years ago

        Thing is, you don't have to cut through the noise these days. Low energy/low bandwidth radio communication routinely sends messages below the noise floor.

        Depends on you application, but if you only send some bits of information ("stocks just crashed") having a big thumper with a very known impact profile is sufficient.

    • Rygian 3 years ago

      I would wonder how massive the thing on the other side of the planet has to be, in order to be detectable.

      The more mass necessary, the more energy you'll need to send messages.

      Unless the detection is extremely accurate, you would be better off spending that energy in electromagnetic radiation that bounces off the atmosphere.

    • georgeecollins 3 years ago

      It's apparently extremely sensitive. Check this out:

      https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/missions/cold-atom-laboratory-cal

  • julienfr112 3 years ago

    Is the gravity really constant ? I mean, big chunk of lava moving with different concentration of iron would make it change, wouldn't it?

    • mytailorisrich 3 years ago

      No, as the parent said it isn't. This is why you can create a map of the variations like this one: https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/11234

      • unyttigfjelltol 3 years ago

        Undersea mountains have gravity signatures very similar to overland mountains, even though the latter are significantly closer to space?

        • igufogkgg 3 years ago

          "Closeness to space" doesn't affect the gravitational force due to a particular piece of matter. Now, if water was as dense as rock, then undersea mountains wouldn't make such a difference to the gravitational field.

          I'm trying to understand why you think "closeness to space" would be a factor. Maybe you are thinking that the seabed is going to be further from a detector than the terrain would be?

          It is true that the further from the Earth the detector is, the smaller the anomaly will be.

          Note that even hills are large enough to deflect the gravitational vector at the surface: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vertical_deflection

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravity_anomaly

    • DaiPlusPlus 3 years ago

      > big chunk of lava moving with different concentration of iron would make it change, wouldn't it

      Why do you think the concentration of iron in magma would not be evenly distributed throughout the mantle?

      • samus 3 years ago

        The magma is not exactly a liquid. Neither is it homogeneous - the roots of the components of continental plates extend down hundreds of kilometers into the mantle. It is also possible to seismologically trace the remains of ancient continental plates which have otherwise all but disappeared from the crust.

    • varjag 3 years ago

      Gravity is not magnetism, it does not care if it's iron or anything else.

      • jh00ker 3 years ago

        His point was that lava density could have high-variability.

      • thinkingemote 3 years ago

        There might be some confusion in these replies related to the gp's mixture of two terms. g = gravity of the earth which varies and the gravitational constant G which is a Constant and the same across the universe.

      • beerpls 3 years ago

        Um how do you figure?

        Gravity cares about distance and mass, and as large parts of the planet move their density distribution shifts affecting both of those factors

        • beerpls 3 years ago

          Lol this point is true but it’s downvoted.

          I love how the IQ of this place keeps spiraling downward.

  • abhayhegde 3 years ago

    As a fellow PhD student having a bit of idea on quantum metrology and sensing, I'd love to know more on your thesis! Kudos, by the way.

  • 5ersi 3 years ago

    Doesn't magnetic pole shift due to fluid dynamics in Earth core? Wouldn't that also affect gravity field?

    • rtkwe 3 years ago

      Yes it does but we also have satellites mapping those shifts so it could be accounted for. The big question is are those fine grained enough to resolve the errors in modern INSs.

      • RationPhantoms 3 years ago

        Wouldn't that then require communication with those satellites to receive the shift/drift info? Doesn't that eradicate the point of a navigational system without reliance on GPS/satellites?

        Or is the drift is so minor that this quantum navigation system can operate for up to 6 months without sufficient core drift alignment calculation?

        • rtkwe 3 years ago

          No idea but there are low bitrate coms available to submarines that could update that data maybe. The changes should be pretty slow at the bulk scale.

  • narenkeshav 3 years ago

    Would it be possible to replicate that on mobile phones? Or a special device is required? 1. trying to figure out the feasibility?

    • thesz 3 years ago

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bose%E2%80%93Einstein_condensa...

      "n condensed matter physics, a Bose–Einstein condensate (BEC) is a state of matter that is typically formed when a gas of bosons at very low densities is cooled to temperatures very close to absolute zero (−273.15 °C or −459.67 °F)..."

      I guess, a special device is needed. The size of such device will be in thousands of mobile phones just in volume needed.

      Yet, it is feasible. ;)

      • wongarsu 3 years ago

        There wasn't much money in miniaturizing them so far. Cooling down tiny amounts of matter is much easier than cooling down larger amounts, so maybe there's hope for a microchip sized BEC in 20 years.

        • thesz 3 years ago

          Let us take a look at what boson is.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boson

          "multiple identical composite bosons (in this context sometimes known as 'bose particles') behave at high densities or low temperatures in a characteristic manner described by Bose–Einstein statistics: for example a gas of helium-4 atoms becomes a superfluid at temperatures close to absolute zero."

          Helium leaks as nothing else, even more than hydrogen.

          Here's some leak rates of heilum: https://www.researchgate.net/figure/Comparison-of-the-helium...

          Let's say we have a um^3 of helium in the device proposed. Let's assume leak rate of 8*10^-9 of cm^3/sec. (1e-6/1e-2)^3/(8e-9) is equal to 1.2499999999999998e-4 - all helium will leak in 1/8 of microsecond in the device proposed.

          I hope this helps.

        • ClumsyPilot 3 years ago

          whats the smalled device to contain a gradient of 300 degrees C?

          this is a but solly, like saying you will eventually have a fridge the size if a m9bile phone - us it usefull?

    • jubjubbird 3 years ago

      The MEMS accelerometers in our phones are in theory sensitive to gravity changes, but they're not nearly sensitive enough. This group is trying to improve the MEMS sensing technology, but it's doubtful it will be as good as classical gravity meters (falling mass, or spring) or quantum (BEC) ones:

      https://www.gla.ac.uk/research/beacons/nanoquantum/wee-gglas...

      One important distinction is between measuring gravity (generally, acceleration in the vertical direction) and the gravity gradient. The latter is generally easier and more useful for navigation.

  • alexpotato 3 years ago

    > a nuclear submarine could use it to make an ultra-accurate map of the world based on variations in the gravitational constant g

    I believe in the book version of the Hunt for Red October by Tom Clancy, they mention that the Soviets did something similar but using a magnetometer.

    Super cool to see the newest versions of this are going from sci-fi to fact.

  • awesometech 3 years ago

    Submarines do not have to surface to get a GPS lock.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Submarine_navigation

    "On the surface or at periscope depth, submarines have used these methods to fix their position"...GPS being one of them.

    A submarine can also navigate by the stars without surfacing.

    https://www.usni.org/magazines/proceedings/2021/october/navi...

    "This is precisely the information required by the traditional method of celestial navigation, and it is accomplished without the need to surface or use a sextant!"

    • awesometech 3 years ago

      Why was I downvoted please? I provided facts to my counterpoint.

      • wolverine876 3 years ago

        Never attribute to malice what can be attributed to ignorance.

        Also, look up the HN guidelines on debating your downvotes.

        Welcome to HN!

  • jofer 3 years ago

    It's somewhat unlikely (but not impossible) that this method is based on navigating by matching patterns of the shape of the geoid (aka variations in g).

    We need accurate maps of the geoid for a lot of different reasons. (Military as well as civilian. Potential fields geophysics is super useful for all kinds of different geologic use cases, and regardless, if you want to target an ICBM, you need an accurate geoid.)

    However, a super precise gravimeter doesn't help much. We have more precision than we can use already. Rather ancient spring-based instruments from 100 years ago can actually still give more precision than we can use in many cases. Modern ship-borne gravity instruments work on different principles, but the signal is very noisy for the same external reasons.

    The biggest issue is that you also need to know absolute elevation very precisely to use the measurement of g that you get. A few millimeters of error in elevation significantly changes the anomaly measurement you make. Sure, submarines can get accurate hydrostatic measurements of depth, but those assume a lot of things and critically aren't absolute. The ocean has currents - that's another way of saying that the surface of the ocean isn't "sea level". Those vary through time and would require satellite information to correct for. However, once you get down in the weeds, it gets tougher still.

    Remember that we're dealing with an inverse square distance relationship. Things close by matter quite a lot.

    People nearby standing in different positions? That actually does affect things. Easy enough to mount the instrument away from people, though. Different distributions of mass in the submarine? Also affects the measurement. You can correct for all of these in various ways, though, so long as you have information on it. It's just more complexity and another source of noise.

    In the end, the "free air anomaly" measurement you'd be correcting things to is an bathymetry map, to the first order. If there's a landslide, that affects things quite a bit, and those happen all the time.

    Finally, you'd be matching a "fingerprint" time series measurement as you travel to a pre made map. That's a non unique relationship. You'd have heading/etc information to help the non uniqueness part significantly, but when things don't vary much (i.e flat topography and not a ton varying geologically), you don't have much of a unique signal to match to.

    At any rate, it's a very useful tool for many other things, but I'm skeptical it could be turned into a precise navigational aid. In combination with traditional gyroscopic/etc measurements of heading and distance, it could help constrain uncertainty, but it's not an independent measurement and it's relatively noisy.

    Now that I think about it, though, a fully passive "seamount proximity sensor" is rather useful, and that's something you'd get even with a noisy signal...

    • krisoft 3 years ago

      > The biggest issue is that you also need to know absolute elevation very precisely to use the measurement of g that you get.

      I don't think so. What you are saying is true if for some reason you want to work with absolute values, but nobody would do that. You measure many data points as your submarine flies over the landscape for a time, and then you match the measured curve with predicted curves from bathymetric maps. This is an optimisation problem where you try to find the best match. Precise elevation is an output from this process not an input requirement.

      > but when things don't vary much (i.e flat topography and not a ton varying geologically), you don't have much of a unique signal to match to

      100%. This is also true for cruise missiles which fly by TERCOM[1]. And there is an interesting consequence to it. Submarines and cruise missiles don't just bumble around randomly. The navigators also know this limitation so they set trajectories which plays to their strength. In the case of the cruise missile planners they have tools to evaluate the navigational quality of a terrain contour matching algorithm over a proposed trajectory with Monte Carlo methods. Probably submariners have the same.

      This means in practice you can know that the submarines are more likely to take certain routes. They will prefer approaching from hilly terrain over flat, but also over extended flat areas they will prefer to overfly butes to regain navigational accuracy. This of course won't tell you precisely where the submarine is, but can help an adversary more economically allocate their ASW assets.

      > At any rate, it's a very useful tool for many other things, but I'm skeptical it could be turned into a precise navigational aid

      Yeah. I mean I heard that people proposed to make measurements of stars to find your location. The fools. Haven't they heard of clouds? Sometimes you can't see as far as your own nose for days.

      Every navigational system ever devised have limitations and peculiarities. If you are comparing gravitational tercom with the ease and quality and simplicity of GPS then of course it will look crude and cumbersome. But of course GPS adds other complications and dangers to the life of a submariner. Used well, and in the right circumstances it can be potentially very valuable technique.

      1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TERCOM

      • jofer 3 years ago

        > What you are saying is true if for some reason you want to work with absolute values, but nobody would do that. You measure many data points as your submarine flies over the landscape for a time, and then you match the measured curve with predicted curves from bathymetric maps.

        The variations due to changes in elevation are orders of magnitude larger than the variations you're relying on using for navigation. Distance from the center of the Earth is the primary signal you're measuring, for better or worse. It's not just relative vs absolute. You can probably assume the sub isn't changing depth rapidly and ocean currents are long wavelength, which would allow relative measurements to be somewhat feasible.

        However, nothing about this requires a new quantum sensor. Ship-borne gravity anomaly measurements have been around for half a century. The previous methods are more than precise enough. In fact, they were done on submarines first before ships - it's easier to measure without waves.

        What's triggering this now? Something doesn't add up... If it were purely based on using gravity anomaly along track measurements as a "fingerprint", it wouldn't need a new sensor. There's likely another mechanism they're using or they're using it for other reasons in addition to navigation.

        • krisoft 3 years ago

          > However, nothing about this requires a new quantum sensor.

          Sure. The news can be many thing. Maybe they got a marginally better gyroscope. Maybe it is not better in terms of better error characteristic, but cheaper, or smaller, or lower maintenance.

          Or maybe they got a new software package which brings them benefits, but the way they could sell it to the leaders is by telling them that the sensor they are using is "quantum".

          Or maybe none of the above and they are just trying to fake out an adversary to trigger a costly mistake.

  • RobotToaster 3 years ago

    Couldn't it also be used to detect submarines as well then? Given they're quite big.

  • stealthcorp 3 years ago

    Very interesting! What year did you complete your PhD? Care to share a link to your thesis?

  • punnerud 3 years ago

    Can you also use it to detect other submarines? If they affect the gravitation

    • dumbo-octopus 3 years ago

      I wonder how close you'd need to be for any small-scale buoyancy differences to be detectable, given the entire object would clearly be neutrally-buoyant.

  • EVa5I7bHFq9mnYK 3 years ago

    Can it also be used for missile guidance, in case of GPS denial?

  • paulsutter 3 years ago

    Does this detect gravity as distinct from acceleration?

    • digging 3 years ago

      Gravity isn't distinct from acceleration though - how would it?

      • paulsutter 3 years ago

        Thats why I asked. And they are different.

        If you throw a baseball in an accelerating enormous elevator in a vacuum, the baseball will follow a parabolic arc.

        If you throw a baseball on the vacuum surface of a planet, it will almost (but not quite) follow a parabolic arc. The force of gravity is lower at the peak, unlike in the elevator where acceleration is constant everywhere in the elevator.

        Therefore, you can distinguish gravity from acceleration

  • snovv_crash 3 years ago

    Isn't this the method used by the sub in Hunt for Red October? Or did they also use a gyroscopic and look for changes in the gravitational vector, not just its magnitude?

    • DaiPlusPlus 3 years ago

      I haven't read the book, but in the film the problem was the Red October was using the caterpillar-drive https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetohydrodynamic_drive (and not a propeller/impeller) but a chance detection by Dallas' sonar along with the ingenuity of Dallas' sonar operator, who figured out how to detect and track Sean Connery's boat. Nothing to do with gravity or gyroscopes at all.

      • snovv_crash 3 years ago

        Yes, but Red October had some super accurate underwater gravity map of some kind that allowed them to navigate at speed through areas Dallas couldn't follow IIRC.

    • jchallis 3 years ago

      Red October used the usual gyroscopes approach that gets more and more inaccurate as it sails. I think a key plot point is that they need to surface to take a latitude / longitude , precipitating much suspense.

    • 1letterunixname 3 years ago

      Passive sonar in the SOFAR channel.

  • hackernewds 3 years ago

    what a sad outcome it is that research such as this is funded for, and classified by military interests such that it is barred from public collaboration and societal progress

andromeduck 3 years ago

Looks like what's happening is they've found a way to use BSEs [1] to measure small variations in the earth's gravity caused by undersea terrain, probably so that they can then use existing satelite measured data [2], to recover absolute position via Terrain Contour Matching [3] like a gulf war tomahawk missle.

Edit: Seems like there's another company that's doing the same thing [4] with BSEs [5].

[1] https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/570707/why-is-ru...

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TERCOM

[3] https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/images/87189/seafloor-feat...

[4] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ZiUfw6ftq4

[5] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X7Y7MikUS4M

  • layer8 3 years ago

    What does BSE stand for? Your link doesn’t mention it.

  • aaron695 3 years ago

    > measure small variations in the earth's gravity

    This would be incorrect.

    It is just a very accurate, unproven in the field, accelerometer.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XwKKOPd-5cU - "Royal Navy's experimental ship carries out first trial of quantum navigation system"

    "The quantum accelerometer uses ultracold atoms to make highly accurate measurements. When cooled to extremely low temperatures the atoms start to display their ‘quantum’ nature, resulting in wave-like properties. As the atoms move through the sensor, an ‘optical ruler’ is formed by using a series of laser pulses. This allows the acceleration of the atoms to be precisely measured."

    • mertd 3 years ago

      Naive question: don't need a precise initial location to tell subsequent locations using an accelerometer? This doesn't fully obviate GPS then?

    • Out_of_Characte 3 years ago

      Acceleration would include changes in gravity.

gnfargbl 3 years ago

The Imperial College researcher who builds these things describes his research here: https://www.imperial.ac.uk/centre-for-cold-matter/research/q...

The page claims that this device attempts to measure acceleration accurately enough that position can be determined (by integrating over time, twice).

Animats 3 years ago

Is there any info on this from a reliable source? No idea what "quantum" means here. Remote entanglement? Some new kind of gyro?

There's something called a "quantum gyroscope".[1] Those exist as lab devices. One good enough for a submarine seems not too big a jump.

[1] https://physics.aps.org/articles/v8/11

  • wging 3 years ago

    The article links to a better article, https://news.sky.com/story/royal-navys-experimental-ship-car..., which calls the device an accelerometer. I think the article linked here got literally all its information from that other article. Apparently it's a small number of rubidium atoms, cooled to near-absolute zero, under which conditions they can apparently measure gravitational effects and make deductions from that ("measure extremely accurately the influence of gravity on their system, which in turn allows them to measure the speed and direction of its movement").

    • readyplayernull 3 years ago

      》measure gravitational effects and make deductions from that ("measure extremely accurately the influence of gravity on their system

      Aha! So it might be able to detect other submarines, even if they use some stealth tech.

      • andromeduck 3 years ago

        Submarines generally have neutral bouyancy while underway so there's not much density difference to discern.

      • rz2k 3 years ago

        That sounds absurd, but the $5 pressure sensor on my weather station could detect a volcanic explosion 5,000 miles away.

        Is there even a difference between a submarine and the surrounding water's gravitational fields when the sub has neutral buoyancy?

        • WinstonSmith84 3 years ago

          I'd argue that the gravity field of a sub is not uniform despite having neutral buoyancy. No idea though how significant that is vs. how sensible the measurement is

        • Out_of_Characte 3 years ago

          There probaly would be, the displacement might be the same but the distribution of mass wouldn't. But I recon these instruments are only sensitive enough to measure the difference between the seafloor and the water above.

      • whimsicalism 3 years ago

        Not even close.

  • beloch 3 years ago

    The article lacks detail, but sounds like it's talking about something like an atomic gyroscope[1].

    There are a few types of passive quantum navigation systems, but the principle is similar to a using a stopwatch and an old-school gyroscope to measure changes in momentum and then calculating your position via dead reckoning. It just sounds like quantum methods have let them get a lot more precise.

    This is actually pretty exciting from the perspective of deep sea exploration. Once you get below the surface there's no GPS and it becomes difficult to fix your position. With one of these, you'd have something like GPS no matter how deep you go.

    [1]https://www.nist.gov/noac/technology/time-and-frequency/atom...

    • Animats 3 years ago

      Submarines have had good inertial navigation systems since the 1960s. Early gyros occupied about a cubic meter.[1] With a really big, heavy flywheel, it's easier to keep drift down. Nuclear submarines usually had three installed, for redundancy.

      [1] https://www.ion.org/museum/item_view.cfm?cid=2&scid=4&iid=4

    • BiteCode_dev 3 years ago

      This is pretty exciting from the perspective of any kind of navigation. If this gets into a phone, we will be able to navigate on a digital map with no signal at all.

nickt 3 years ago

The quoted Sky News article has a (tiny bit) more info.

https://news.sky.com/story/royal-navys-experimental-ship-car...

neonate 3 years ago

https://archive.ph/vaIlJ

http://web.archive.org/web/20230607080527/https://thequantum...

kebman 3 years ago

A friend of mine got PTSD from piloting huge nuclear subs in subsea ravines with a clearing of only one inch on each side of the sub. One wrong move, and the entire crew is gone. He also had to do this in conditions similar to surface storms. Looks like autonomous or automatic systems may be developed for those kinds of manoeuvres now, if it is truly that precise. Seems like a huge leap in navigational systems.

  • verisimi 3 years ago

    An inch! He was lucky! My friend was only given half an inch, and that was considered generous!

  • kortilla 3 years ago

    > One wrong move, and the entire crew is gone.

    Not really. Subs don’t move that fast in those tight of conditions. One wrong move and the sub bumps the canyon wall making a bunch of noise. Unless they are in actively hostile waters, it just means loss of stealth and the sub needs to choose a new location to lurk.

  • LgWoodenBadger 3 years ago

    Oh come on...

    "On 8 January 2005 at 02:43 GMT, San Francisco collided with an undersea mountain about 364 nautical miles (675 km) southeast of Guam while operating at flank (maximum) speed at a depth of 525 feet (160 m)."

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_San_Francisco_(SSN-711)

    • kebman 3 years ago

      So, here's an anecdote of a sub that miraculously survived a head on collision. What's your point?

      From the same article:

      “The collision was so serious that the vessel was almost lost; accounts detail a desperate struggle for positive buoyancy to surface after the forward ballast tanks were ruptured.”

      I doubt these are problems any submarine crew wants to deal with, even at slow speeds. Besides, one sharp edge at the sides will open her right up like a tin can.

      • pnpnp 3 years ago

        I can't speak for the poster, but I would guess it's something along the lines of "military subs are pretty tough," and the bit about killing everyone onboard with a slow collision may have been an exaggeration.

        They are meant for warfare and surviving torpedo concussions as much as possible, so depending on speed, a slow scrape with terrain might not be fatal.

        • kebman 3 years ago

          Or it might be fatal. You don't know that. What we do know is the general construction of a sub, which is that of an "egg". It's built to withstand extreme global pressure (pressure from all sides at once, like water does). But as I'm sure you've noticed, eggs don't hold up very well against needles.

  • andromeduck 3 years ago

    A few meters of clearance I could beleive but I don't think the hydrodnymaics and control/reaction times works allows for that at all even if you had the measurements nailed.

  • dekhn 3 years ago

    I think your friend may have embellished both the accuracy and the risk (not to say that piloting a sub is completely stress free, obviously).

    • pnpnp 3 years ago

      Also maybe not! I don't know what the phenomenon is called, but large ships going though the canals create their own buffer to some extent. It's pretty cool!

  • HyperSane 3 years ago

    There is no way that subs can be controlled accurately enough to do that.

    • bottom999mottob 3 years ago

      There is no way anyone would hyperbolize the experience of their friend squeezing a submarine through ravines on the internet.

      • UberFly 3 years ago

        Squeezing submarines through internet ravines sounds really interesting. Go on.

      • yodon 3 years ago

        When a storyteller has clearly hyperbolized the parts of their story that can be fact checked, they have destroyed any reason to believe the remainder of their words.

mmastrac 3 years ago

You know exactly where you are but you can't figure out how fast you're going.

(I'm sorry)

But seriously, this article is light on details. Is this just fancy dead-reckoning?

  • andromeduck 3 years ago

    99% sure this is for mapping the seafloor and preforming localization based on that like pre-gps cruise missles missles did with downward facing radar.

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/TERCOM

  • was_a_dev 3 years ago

    > But seriously, this article is light on details

    I'd expect it to be light on details. It is a project funded by the Royal Navy for next-generation navigation. Thye don't really want to give away details other than, "we have this"

    A recent TV news report covered this in the UK. The only thing they could show was an prototype in a lab setting and a sealed white box on the test platform boat.

Angostura 3 years ago

Original source and more detail here: https://news.sky.com/story/royal-navys-experimental-ship-car...

mach1ne 3 years ago

The headline feels like from an alternate 1940s timeline.

davidgerard 3 years ago

Reblog of https://news.sky.com/story/royal-navys-experimental-ship-car...

ThinkBeat 3 years ago

I have two somewhat related questions:

Can a submerged military submarine let divers "out", and / or divers "in"?

Do they have air locks / water locks?

It would seem possible, enormously dependent on the depth of the submarine. Not just from the perspective of the integrity of the giant uboat but also the integrity of divers.

In movies (which are always "accurate") they put people into torpedo tubes. Which I believe do feature some form of an air locks and ports to open and close. Not sure a person would fit, or if it is physically possible given the operation of the tube.

If possible, can they enter the same way?

My second question is if you can do deep sea fishing? (while submerged) Have fresh as can be sushi?

I figure if you can let a person in and out, that person could go hunt fish and bring it back.

They dont have windows but from sonar does pick up some sea creatures. You could possibly have a harpoon with a sensor on it you could extend to catch fish.

It just seems it ought to be possible. With a nuclear submarine, I think, one of the limits to how long you can operate before requiring supplies is food. I hope a nuclear submarine has a way to creating fresh water from salt water as benefit for having a reactor. at least.

politician 3 years ago

"The XV Patrick Blackett, the Navy’s new experimental vessel, provided the setting for the experiment. Sky News said the ship makes a perfect host for the futuristic experiment — it boasts a sleek design, featuring tinted windows and a glossy black hull."

Aesthetics are key for quantum navigation /s

  • mpnordland 3 years ago

    What's the point of knowing where you are if you don't look cool while you're there? /s On the other hand, I do appreciate the efficiency of serving the PR mission and the testing mission with the same boat.

siraben 3 years ago

The cover image certainly looks AI-generated. The rods on the top of the submarine seem oddly positioned.

jimnotgym 3 years ago

Good news for the US Navy too, since they will get this research for free as part of the tribute the UK pays for US protection

tomas789 3 years ago

As mentioned here [1] they use atom interferometry to build extremely precise sensors of acceleration and rotation. This is everything needed to build an inertial navigation system (INS). This is completely independent of any external system. My guess is that this is what makes is so interesting for subs.

Probably the biggest issue with INSs is accuracy of the raw IMU measurements. The acceleration must be integrated twice. That means any error in the measurement gets exponentially larger with time. Rotation velocity measurements are integrated only once (some IMUs measure absolute orientation but it is not the case here) so the error does not explode as fast. Is is the combination with translation that is problematic. If you rotate around vertical axis by 90deg +/- 1% and then travel for 1000km +/- 1% the rotation accuracy will cause bigger error in final location.

To have an INS capable of long time operation without any other means of drift correction one has to nail many other things.

- Gravitational constant varies and you have to have an accurate map of it. We might not have a good enough one. I don't know. The subs could collect their measurements and perform a large scale optimization to increase the accuracy of this map.

- The rotation of earth gets added to the rotation speed measurements. The rotation is not constant (hence the leap seconds from now and then). We have to be able to extrapolate it well enough.

- Sampling rate of the quantum IMU has to be high enough. How usefull is the most precise measurement if you can measure only once in 10 minutes? Traditional IMUs sample at 1 kHz and more.

- Does the new quantum gyroscope add enough value to the accuracy of the final IMU compared to Fibre-optic gyroscopes? They are incredibly accurate as they are based on laser interferometry and then can sample at high frequency. Plus they are an established technology which partially benefits from economy of scale [5] because they are used in airplanes [6].

- The measurements of both rotation velocity and acceleration have to be measured in 3 axes. Are the relative orientations and translations of those axes stable enough as the device moves?

- Is the noise present in the measurements corelated to something or is it truly random? The corelation could mean an systematic error to the state estimate.

- You will likely also have to have an atomic clock on board labeling each IMU measurement as soon as it is made. But this is not a problem nowadays as one can have a small Rubidium-based atomic clock in a package starting to resemble a chip [2] [3] [4].

- And of course you will need enough computing power to calculate everything. I'm not sure how modern hardware they are allowed on board of nuclear-carrying subs. This is slight problem for things like Mars rover as due to the testing requirements the main chip can be easily 30 years old when the rocket is launched [7].

Also, the situation is not as bad as we can utilize the sensor fusion and correct lots of errors caused by IMU measurements. From the top of my head one can obviously measure water pressure which estimates depth (with some error). Sea bed topology could be other type of measurement but my guess is that this measurement is too crude compared to the accuracy of the quantum-based INS.

[1] https://www.imperial.ac.uk/centre-for-cold-matter/research/q...

[2] https://eu.mouser.com/new/microchip/microchip-macsa5x-atomic...

[3] https://www.sparkfun.com/products/14830

[4] https://www.accubeat.com/nano-atomic-clock

[5] https://emcore.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/EMCORE-Commerc...

[6] https://www.airbus.com/en/products-services/space/equipment/...

[7] https://bigthink.com/hard-science/perseverance-rover-brain/

mikewarot 3 years ago

An update to an existing idea[1], with lower noise.

[1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravity_gradiometry#

PicassoCTs 3 years ago

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fibre-optic_gyroscope ?

DarkmSparks 3 years ago

probably the arxiv article its based on back from 2019

https://arxiv.org/abs/1805.06198

avidphantasm 3 years ago

This sounds like fancy next-gen inertial navigation. You’ll still need charts (and ENCs) and still need GPS (for periodic updates to the inertially derived position).

  • vesinisa 3 years ago

    Inertial navigation is a form of dead reckoning. It needs periodic updates (GPS fixes) to stay accurate.

    If this however works like some other commenters have theorized (by finding reliable matches to the known contour of the bottom of the ocean), it's not a form of dead reckoning and can instead be used as a fix for dead reckoning.

    • avidphantasm 3 years ago

      I don’t know how that would work. Most of the ocean (ca. 75% is unmapped) and is constantly changing.

      • wolverine876 3 years ago

        Possibly, military submarines are interested in only a small part of the ocean. The Strait of Hormuz probably is well-mapped; some spot in the middle of the Indian Ocean might be unneeded.

EricE 3 years ago

Good for them. Navigation relying solely on GPS always struck me as extremely stupid for the very reasons mentioned in the article.

TechBro8615 3 years ago

Do we know if any animals navigate this way, or is that generally limited to following the magnetic field of the Earth?

cryptonector 3 years ago

Hmmm, a better inertial guidance system sounds awesome. But... why is this not a state secret?

rocqua 3 years ago

I'm surprised we don't see more military research for SAT-NAV alternatives. In any big conflict SAT-NAV is trivial to turn off. If you can still position yourself and your enemy can't, that is an enormous advantage in targeting, logistics, coordination, and situational awareness. Seems like a no-brainer.

  • kebman 3 years ago

    You're probably surprised that you don't see it, because it's top secret.

    Here's an example of something you don't hear about: AI Assisted Battlefield Tactics. While I've never heard of it (certainly not in the press), I simply assume that they're doing research on it. I base this assumption on the AlphaStar AI from DeepMind that would completely pawn Grand Masters in the game of StarCraft 2.

    While AlphaStar is obviously designed for a game with very set rules and weights, I don't think it's unfeasible to develop a similar military AI that could also work in the shifting tactics of the modern battlefields.

    The result would be comical, as larger armies without such an AI would always lose to someone with that AI, even if their army is much smaller or seemingly technologically disadvantaged. And it would seem that there's at least one such country in such a position today, which is also heavily supported by the NATO.

    • sakras 3 years ago

      AlphaStar hardly pawned GMs in any meaningful way. It mainly won on mechanics, even when Deepmind tried to nerf its mechanics. Probably the most important thing is that the “200 APM limit” is way higher than any human can do, because it made use of each one of its actions. Humans can reach 400+ APM by spamming, but their EPM will stay much lower than 200. The result is that it had god-tier micro that changed the game completely: zergling runby’s are normally good for Zerg and bad for Protoss. With alphastar, it was the opposite, because it could micro to avoid losing any workers. Its disruptor micro was again unmatched.

      Now, my last argument for why alphastar wasn’t some sort of brilliant tactician was that eventually people figured out that it’s susceptible to all the same problems a normal bot is: you can dart a warp prism in and out of its vision and it will send its army back and forth, you can confuse it by going mass raven/PF etc. and it’s completely unable to adapt. So in conclusion, no: AlphaStar doesn’t say anything one way or another about military AIs.

      • K0balt 3 years ago

        The word is pwned, not pawned, by the way. I suspect your autocorrect, as well as op’s has had it’s way with your prose.

        I often wonder how much autocorrect will shape the evolution of language.

        • notahacker 3 years ago

          > I often wonder how much autocorrect will shape the evolution of language

          Apple recently announced that it was going to stop autocorrecting a certain expletive intensifier to "ducking", and I think that one actually had the potential to catch on....

          I wonder if it'll ultimately do more to preserve ridiculous quirks of English spelling (and US/UK distinctions) most people don't remember or care about than change language

        • sakras 3 years ago

          That’s hilarious, I did actually write “pawned” intentionally, but while writing it I thought, “Haven’t heard this one before, but I guess it makes sense, it treated them like pawns in chess”

        • mnw21cam 3 years ago

          s/it's/its/

    • 1letterunixname 3 years ago

      There are plenty of niches but most people aren't aware of them: surveying and navigation. There's nothing particular secret about an RLG or an MRG at this time. There are enough examples of civilian industrial equipment using them. There are also MEMS-based accelerometers, such as those in your phone, and ones with several orders more precision and accuracy.

      Applications include:

      - Underground

      - Under dense rainforest canopy where GNSS signals don't reach

      - In narrow and deep valleys

      - Salt water deeper than 200 mm

      - In space, far away from GNSS systems (GNSSes work in space)

      Source: I may have wandered through Trimble Nav Ltd. once or twice.

    • kortilla 3 years ago

      The battlefield is nothing like StarCraft though. StarCraft gives you real time control and visibility of every soldier and every enemy within the view range of any of your units. That has approximately no overlap with how command works in real militaries.

      • kebman 3 years ago

        The battlefield is nothing like StarCraft? Think of SC as a top down model for how a real battlefield map can be. Just give each actor more realistic traits. So no strange Protoss or Zerg creatures! Perhaps base it on a more probabilistic model that treats each contact more as an uncertainty, like it would be under the fog of war.

        Suddenly you've got a viable model to use on real tactical maps, that is strikingly similar to SC2, though adapted to real life conditions. That is, if you're able to track - or in the least theorize the position of - each individual "piece" on that board (so soldiers and armour, etc).

        A real life soldier does perhaps have some different qualities and abilities than a space marine, but it's still a great starting point for building a more realistic model.

        So say, your model looks more like Arma 3... Only top down. Now, I've been in the army, so I can tell you first hand that many aspects of Arma 3 is scarily realistic. Other aspects, not so much. But if you add in some modding, and all that is solved.

        It's the same principle. You've already have a base AI to "play the game" and now you adapt each information point to reflect real life instead of game mechanics.

        Sure, this sort of AI is brand new, so there would of course be things to iron out. Perhaps you need to use other statistical models to better capture the fog of war. But at the end of it, I think it can be done. Hell, perhaps it can even be used to fight crime. What do I know, perhaps it already is, but nobody wants to talk about it, kind of like how it was such a great moment when it dropped that New Scotland Yards used graph databases to solve cases before it was cool.

        • kortilla 3 years ago

          Arma 3 might be somewhat realistic, but that has nothing to do with what I’m saying about Warcraft 3. I’m saying the level of micromanagement and perfect information in W3 is completely unlike how actual battlefields can be managed.

          AI that is good at W3 manages every individual unit’s actions and it does that based on a map that magically reveals enemies when you get close. Nothing like that would ever work IRL.

    • sgt101 3 years ago

      Acushully...

      There is a very specific problem - the simulation speed problem - that is in the way.

      For games RL agents can be trained by running billions of adversarial simulations. Set up a battle between two agents and reward the one that wins, try variations and repeat, and repeat, and repeat. The trick is to manage the search process so as to not waste time on strategy branches that won't get anywhere, but the idea is very simple.

      Unfortunately for things like real world conflict the simulations aren't that representative of what really happens, they are also really really really really complex and slow, and so finding wining strategies is a bit hard.

  • dasv 3 years ago

    Lately I have been trying to improve performance of a high precision RTK GNSS receiver installed somewhere high up on the Barents sea, near the Russian border with Norway. Some days it works perfectly down to cm accuracy, but other days it is not able to hold an RTK fix at all.

    I was suspecting the northern lights were to blame for most of this trouble since the bad performance periods more or less track to high Kp periods, but it seems that it may be man made interference... There are recent reports from planes flying routes over that area about bad GNSS reception, and efforts from NKOM to log conditions with mobile antennas.

    It's probably happening already.

  • HyperSane 3 years ago

    The US military is working on a device that can use stars to determine location even during the day.

Fervicus 3 years ago

Can you ELI5 how this works?

wslh 3 years ago

Hobby and business wise: is it difficult to build this thing? Someone could explain what a startup need to do something similar?

  • yodon 3 years ago

    > Is it difficult to build this thing?

    Yes.

    > What would a startup need to make this work as a business?

    Extensive contacts in the submarine navigation ecosystem and several decades of deep knowledge of highly complex, highly classified, related navigation systems that this product would need to interoperate with.

    This tech is not a magic locator machine on its own, it's a component that improves one small but important part of a very large and complex locator system and locator ecosystem.

    If the startup has that sort of contact list and experience, it's probably not a startup, it is most likely a division of one of a very small number of very large defense contractors.

    (And for those who might argue it's not just for submarines, if the startup has the relevant contacts in the submarine navigation ecosystem, it probably also has the relevant contacts in the other equally classified navigation ecosystems like for cruise missiles and etc., and the technicals aspects of this particular part of the problem domain will probably be relevant across other platform types, even if the details of submarine vs cruise missile inertial navigation platforms are different.)

    • wslh 3 years ago

      Thank you, two more questions: do we expect that other governments in the world will build a similar system soon? and/or how many years of advantage does the Royal Navy have?

      • WastingMyTime89 3 years ago

        Nobody knows what the Royal Navy actually has. Nobody knows what other governments have. You are in the realm of what are the actual capabilities of nuclear weapons carrying subs. You can safely assume than anything remotely interesting is classified.

dlahoda 3 years ago

Www.

jmount 3 years ago

Same government that buys dowsing rods for de-mining.

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