Submarine (nonfiction): Difference between revisions

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File:Wilhelm Bauer.gif|link=Wilhelm Bauer (nonfiction)|1875: Inventor and engineer [[Wilhelm Bauer (nonfiction)|Wilhelm Bauer]] incorporates [[Gnomon algorithm functions]] into plans for new submarine.
File:Submarine and anti-submarine (1919).jpg|link=The Unruly Submarine|[[The Unruly Submarine]], a celebrated children's story.
File:Submarine and anti-submarine (1919).jpg|link=The Unruly Submarine|[[The Unruly Submarine]], a celebrated children's story.
File:Submarines scrapped.jpg|Haunted submarine graveyard open for Halloween.
File:Submarines scrapped.jpg|Haunted submarine graveyard open for Halloween.

Revision as of 12:58, 18 December 2016

Drebbel, the first navigable submarine, invented by Cornelius Drebbel.

A submarine is a watercraft capable of independent operation underwater.

The noun submarine evolved as a shortened form of submarine boat (and is often further shortened to sub). For reasons of naval tradition, submarines are usually referred to as "boats" rather than as "ships", regardless of their size.

Although experimental submarines had been built before, submarine design took off during the 19th century, and they were adopted by several navies.

Submarines were first widely used during World War I (1914–1918), and now figure in many navies large and small.

Most large submarines consist of a cylindrical body with hemispherical (or conical) ends and a vertical structure, usually located amidships, which houses communications and sensing devices as well as periscopes.

Modern deep-diving submarines derive from the bathyscaphe, which in turn evolved from the diving bell.

Used as an adjective in phrases such as submarine cable, submarine means "under the sea".

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