answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

The hull is the outer shell or the metal skin of the submarine that protects the inner area from the outside water.

User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What is the hull of a submarine?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

Can water exert pressure on a submarine?

Yes, water exerts pressure on the hull of the submarine.


What is a casing deck on a submarine?

A casing deck is another term for a submarine's superstructure hull, which is the outer hull that protects the inner pressure hull. Using a thermos bottle as an analogy, the inner container where liquid goes would be the pressure hull, and the outer case which protects it the superstructure, or outer hull.


Why might a submarine be crushed if it sinks too low in the ocean?

Submarine hulls are subject to sea pressure, and that pressure increases the deeper the submarine goes. There are design limits to the amount of pressure that a hull can take, and if that pressure is exceeded by diving too deep, the hull will fail and will be crushed.


Why does the strength of a submarine hull have to be stronger than the hull of a ship?

because if a submarine goes under water to deep levels, it needs to hold against the air pressure. Yes the person said above.. They have to have a MUCH higher ability to withstand the pressure of the water pushing in against the hull of it.


Why if a submarine is submerged too low can it be destroyed?

Yes it can. Every submarine has a maximum depth at which it is safe to operate. If it goes lower than its safe limit, the pressure can crush the hull.


Why are submarines always built with very thick and heavy metal?

The pressure hull of a submarine must withstand the pressure of water at depth. Hundreds of pounds of pressure per square inch translates into many tons of pressure around a pressure hull. If that hull doesn't have the strength to stand up to this, the pressure hull will implode. Steel is a "known quantity" as far as metals. We've used it for a long time, and we have a good handle on its characteristics. Steel alloys are extremely strong, fairly easy to fabricate, and won't double the national debt if we use this metal to make a submarine pressure hull. Steel's weldability and its common availability make it a fine choice for submarine pressure hulls. It's really strong, too. That's a big plus. No one wants to be inside the pressure hull of a submarine when it fails.


What happens when a submarine reaches crush level?

When a boat reaches its crush depth limit, the inner pressure hull succumbs to the extreme outer sea pressure, causing the hull to implode.


How does a submarines propeller shaft go through the hull and still leave the submarine watertight?

All submarine screw shafts have seals around the full length of the shaft hull penetration area to prevent water coming in. Shaft seals can be mechanical, hydraulic, etc., but regardless they serve the same purpose.


How do you use periscope in a sentence?

Periscopes allow a submarine, when submerged at a shallow depth, to search visually for nearby targets and threats on the surface of the water and in the air. When not in use, a submarine's periscope retracts into the hull.


Why is a submarine in danger of being crushed if it travels to the bottom of the ocean?

The pressure exerted on the hull of the sub will get too great and crush it.


Why are submarines forbidden to sink beyond a limit?

The hull of the submarine will crush or give way if the pressure of the water is too much.


Was the Poseidon a U.S. Navy submarine?

No - there has never been a submarine with that name in the current or past Naval fleet. The only ship to bear the name Poseidon was USS Poseidon, (ARL-12), an Achelous-class repair ship in WWI. There was a movie, USS Poseidon: Phantom Below, which had a fictitious Navy submarine called the Poseidon. However, the hull number is for the active commissioned submarine USS Georgia (SSGN 729), and there has never been an attack submarine with that hull number or designation. Hollywood rarely uses real hull numbers of active ships to avoid any legal problems. The exceptions are those in which the production involves ships/submarines in which the storyline actually involves them. For example, The Hunt for Red October featured the USS Dallas, a real LA-class fast-attack submarine, of which an old friend of mine served aboard during filming. Usually though, the film will use a decommissioned hull number - many older films use 593, the hull number of the Thresher, which sank in the early 60's.