Kelvin Hughes, a U.K. baesd designer and supplier of navigation and security surveillance systems, announced that it can now bring all the benefits of its SharpEye radar technology to submarines.
The technology is far from operational. While similar sensors have proven reliable in detecting low-flying aircraft over shallow waters, the challenge could be far greater in the open sea. But this ...
National Security Journal on MSN
Astute-Class Submarine Has A Message for NATO and the Russian Navy
Key Points and Summary – Britain’s Astute-class attack submarines, heirs to the Trafalgar boats, marry quiet nuclear ...
Germany has taken delivery of its first P-8A Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft, a reconnaissance jet capable of tracking and ...
Autocar on MSN
Top 10: Submarine-Destroying Aircraft of All Time
Converted bombers would roar a few hundred feet above the sea dropping depth charges and firing rockets; with over 120 Allied ...
U.S. Naval Sea Systems Command has awarded Northrop Grumman Corporation's Sperry Marine business unit a $20.9 million contract to supply navigation radar systems for eight new Navy nuclear attack ...
From the flight deck of the USS Gerald R. Ford to the submarines prowling the depths of the Caribbean, the United States has assembled a military force unseen in the region for decades.
Kelvin Hughes, a U.K. baesd designer and supplier of navigation and security surveillance systems, announced that it can now bring all the benefits of its SharpEye radar technology to submarines.
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