The following piece first appeared on Warrior Maven, a Military Content Group member website.

 

The US Navy is testing a cutting-edge submarine-launched drone system engineered to be released from beneath the surface of the ocean to perform forward, wide-area reconnaissance and targeting.

The small unmanned system is engineered to survive transit through the water column up to the surface and into the air to provide continuous connectivity for submarine commanders interested in surveilling the threat environment, identifying targets, and sustaining connectivity with surface ships, drones, and aircraft.

A 2023 Navy essay from the Naval Undersea Warfare Center describes the Submarine Launched Unmanned Aerial System (SLUAS) as a four-pound, 19-inch drone sensor launched from undersea in a canister through a three-inch signal ejector.

The upcoming assessment, which is designed to further refine tactics, technologies, requirements and Concepts of Operation, is being led by the Naval Information Warfare Center – Pacific. The Navy will work closely with its industry partners to explore the realm of the possible with SLUAS and identify new tactics and possibilities for continued upgrades.

The tactical impact is quite significant, as it enables submarines to operate with a much wider command and control envelope by using RF data-link transmissions able to reach submarine crews operating just beneath the surface of the ocean.

“The high-level purpose of the program is really to bring that extension of onboard sensors into the submarine….Specifically with this program, it was looking at bringing a visual sensor onboard. The strength of the submarines is really in our sonar, our electronic warfare, but we can’t typically see a lot. We really only have the periscope, and that’s about it,” Greg Walsh, a technical project manager for the SLUAS program in Division Newport’s Undersea Warfare Combat Systems Department, said in the October 2023 Navy essay.