September 11 boosted terror alerts everywhere, including
underwater. Now, the FBI is asking the nation’s scuba
instructors to watch for potential terrorist threats. Its Joint
Terrorism Task Force recently alerted dive shops around the
country to look out for divers seeking advanced training,
including diving in murky water and in sewer pipes. The
FBI said the advisory is routine and was not prompted by
any threat, but it did ask instructors to be aware of “odd
inquiries” inconsistent with recreational diving, such as
advanced navigation techniques, deep diving and using
underwater vehicles.
You may picture the image of hooded divers with spearguns
chasing each other around underwater on self-propelled
vehicles, like James Bond in Thunderball.But just as Agent
007 was fictional, so is that scenario. Capturing and killing
divers by hand only happens in the movies.
The most promising non-lethal diver
weapon is a low-frequency sound. |
With hundreds of thousands of certified divers out in the
water, how can the military differentiate between those intent
on carrying out terrorist attacks and those who just innocently
stumble into restricted areas? And do they refrain from
injuring, even killing, unsuspecting divers unintentionally?
The good news is armed forces are developing remarkable
non-lethal weapons that separate the good from the bad.
Passive sonar is used to listen for sounds like propellers,
motors and marine mammals, but divers are harder to track.
Those using open-circuit scuba gear produce periodic noise
that can be detected and classified, but divers using rebreathers
don’t produce the same amounts of noise and so are
extremely difficult to locate on a sonar screen.
According to a 2002 report commissioned by the Navy’s
Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center in San Diego, the
most promising long-term solution for a non-lethal diver
threat weapon is a low-frequency sound in the 20 to 100
megahertz range. That would be just enough to cause a lot of
discomfort to divers’ ears and lungs but no physical damage.
The report’s recommendation was “spark gap sound sources”
that store electric charge in a large, high-voltage bank of
conductors, then release all the stored energy in an arc across
electrodes in the water. This spark discharge creates a highpressure
plasma and vapor bubble in the water that expands
and then collapses, making a loud sound similar to those
from air guns and underwater explosions.
According to a New Scientist article, the U.S. Navy’s Anti-
Terrorism Afloat program is developing and testing a sparkgap
system to deploy from patrol boats or control remotely
from the sea floor. Ideally, the device will emit an audible,
low-powered warning when an intruder is sighted to make
him surface, but also create more severe effects if an intruder
persists. But it won’t be lethal. This is partly because of
the risk of accidentally targeting innocent divers, but also
“because you can learn much more from people if they are
alive,” Tom LaPuzza, a spokesperson for the Space and Naval
Warfare Systems Center, told New Scientist.
“There’s a tremendous emphasis now on underwater terrorism
protection,” says Rob Williamson, marketing director
for Marine Sonic in White Marsh, Virginia. Marine Sonic’s
top product is Sea Scan PC, a navigational computer that
uses sonar to transmit sound into the water and GPS to
let users search, record and locate any objects of interest.
Sea Scan PC can also use transducers to let law enforcement
scan for moving divers swimming through sonar
beams. “They can see divers but the divers can’t see them,”
Williamson says. Sea Scan only uses low-frequency sonar
tuned so low even divers won’t hear it. “We certify to the
military that the system will not hurt a diver. We’d never
use high-frequency because that would turn divers’ internal
organs into jelly.”
British security company Westminster International has
created Enforcer, a sound generator combining high-resolution
sonar with powerful loudspeakers that can emit intense
bursts of noise to detect divers. If the intruder fails to surface,
an Enforcer user switches on a high-power signal that can create
panic, sickness and confusion. Westminster says Enforcer
was recently used to defend the coastline of a city in the
Middle East during an international summit and is under
evaluation by the U.S. government as protection for pipelines.
In January, researchers at the Georgia Institute of
Technology released a sensor that detects the direction from which a sound is coming underwater. Francois Guillot, a
research engineer who helped devise the sensor, says it could
allow the Navy to develop compact scanners that detect quiet
underwater divers. “Our sensor detects small sounds over the
noise of the ocean and also provides directional information,
an important improvement over current technology.”
The sensor uses fiber optics, a technique inspired by how
fish hear underwater. A fish’s ear has thousands of tiny hairs
that move when a sound wave passes through the fish. The
hairs communicate with the nerves to allow fish to detect
sound and avoid getting eaten.
Currently, the Navy uses expensive hydrophones, long
lines towed behind boats using sonar to listen to underwater
sound but lacking knowledge about its direction. “The
hydrophones are thousands of feet long, making it difficult
to maneuver the ship,” says Guillot. “Since we can cut that
length by a factor of five, it will cost less money to operate
and be easier to handle.” The project was funded by the
Office of Naval Research.
But the spread of acoustic weapons underwater concerns
marine biologists. There is evidence that sonar can kill or
injure whales because it forces them to surface quickly, giving
them the equivalent of the bends. Sound can also travel
farther underwater than in air, disrupting communications between animals even hundreds of miles away, which could
create huge exclusion zones in the ocean for fish and marinebased
animals. Last spring, a group including the National
Resources Defense Council and the California Coastal
Commission filed lawsuits against the Navy for its intention
to use sonar near the Channel Islands National Marine
Sanctuary in Southern California. It’s the first time such a
lawsuit has been brought by a government agency. LaPuzza
says new systems will be thoroughly evaluated for their
effects on the marine environment. Each possible site will be evaluated, deployment will be on a case-by-case basis and
they will not be used where there is a risk to sea creatures
– or recreational divers.
As technology improves, you can breathe easier that the
military is more able to detect and catch that rebreatherwearing
diver 30 feet underneath a cruise ship, and less likely
to set its sights on you.
- - Vanessa Richardson