Submarine Surveillance Systems Parts

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Part Number
NSN
NIIN
00-7022-035-00-001 Electrical Receptacle Connector
009906871
00-7022-035-000-001 Electrical Receptacle Connector
009906871
00-7022-035-000-105 Electrical Receptacle Connector
009906871
00-7022-035-000M Electrical Receptacle Connector
009906871
00-7022-035-000M001 Electrical Receptacle Connector
009906871
007022035-000-00 Electrical Receptacle Connector
009906871
030-0066-00 Electrical Receptacle Connector
002259134
052071 Electrical Receptacle Connector
014474416
055839 Electrical Receptacle Connector
011567547
0721B0015 Electrical Receptacle Connector
010941421
0SM224 Electrical Receptacle Connector
002259134
1-85930-9 Electrical Receptacle Connector
004329230
1-86119-7 Electrical Receptacle Connector
004329230
1000-1022 Electrical Receptacle Connector
011567547
1000-1022-2 Electrical Receptacle Connector
011567547
10131687 Electrical Receptacle Connector
010875801
10156277 Electrical Receptacle Connector
007897762
102335-104 Electrical Receptacle Connector
009906871
1160063P1 Electrical Receptacle Connector
008443143
1251-0071 Electrical Receptacle Connector
004840202
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Submarine Surveillance Systems

Picture of Submarine Surveillance Systems

SOSUS, an acronym for sound surveillance system, is a chain of underwater listening posts located around the world in places such as the Atlantic Ocean near Greenland, Iceland and the United Kingdom—the GIUK gap—and at various locations in the Pacific Ocean. The United States Navy's initial intent for the system was for tracking Soviet submarines, which had to pass through the gap to attack targets further west. It was later supplemented by mobile assets such as the Surveillance Towed Array Sensor System (SURTASS), and became part of the Integrated Undersea Surveillance System (IUSS).

SOSUS development was started in 1949 when the US Navy formed the Committee for Undersea Warfare to research anti-submarine warfare. The panel allocated $10 million annually to develop systems to counter the Soviet submarine threat consisting primarily of a large fleet of diesel submarines. They decided on a system to monitor low-frequency sound in the SOFAR channel using multiple listening sites equipped with hydrophones and a processing facility that could detect submarine positions by triangulation over hundreds of miles.

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