Underwater microphones designed to detect enemy submarines first detected Titan tragedy.

  • Morrigane@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Just hope it was quick. I hate imagining sitting in that tube listening to things starting to ominously crack.

  • StaggersAndJags@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I don’t understand the timeline. It’s been reported elsewhere that the tourism company didn’t report the submarine’s disappearance for eight hours. This article says “The Navy began listening for the Titan almost as soon as the sub lost communications.”

    Did the crew sit there trapped for eight+ hours and then the sub imploded? I thought any hull failure would happen a lot faster than that.

    Or is this article confused? It would make sense that the navy is always listening, and deduced what they’d heard after they learned of the disappearance.

    • shiftenter@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, I thought that was confusing as well. I’d be shocked if the navy wasn’t always recording. If the point of the system is defense, I’m sure it’s not down to Frank to flip the switch on when they think there’s going to be an attack.

      Maybe by “listening” they meant reviewing the recorded data around that time?

  • VoxAdActa@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I knew it.

    I was sitting here thinking “Wow, it’s odd that the only found the debris field exactly when the sub would have run out of oxygen. There’s no way that’s a coincidence. I’ll bet they knew it was toast days ago and just kept everyone on the hook.”

    • shiftenter@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I’m guessing it was just a coincidence between the 96 hour mark and when the capable ROVs finally arrived on site. They deployed the ROV that discovered the debris in the early AM today. Based on the fact that info was already leaking prior to the coast guard announcement, it was probably known for several hours before being made public.

      Edit: Yeah, they probably had reasonable suspicion that the sub was gone. But until they had evidence, continuing search and rescue seems like the prudent thing to do.