In a book of PN history, perhaps called, SENTINELS OF THE SEA, I read war mission and in that they mentioned that the submarine left "FALSE TRACKS"........I want to understand that if a submarine is going in one direction, how can it leave tracks in an another direction.........naval experts please.....
Eject a decoy/simulator the opposite direction/bearing at a similar decibal (db) count to attempt to confuse the other boat's passive sonars.
I would be interesting to know that how the Pakistan Navy deals with the SOSUS system of USA........it was a top-secret underwater surveillance system against submarines, especially russian submarines...........SOSUS network covered almost all the important areas of the world..........now that SOSUS has been declassified, I am sure a new more complex secret underwater surveillance may have been commissioned.....
Modern Towed Array system largely eliminate the need for fixed sensor networks such as SOSUS. However in a regional confined setting such as the Indo-Pak maritime border both nations have the littorals wired for sound with SOSUS-like seabed arrays.
What I understand from the Naval Magazines available in the shops is that Hunter Killer Submarines dont dog fight. It is always an ambush. If you can detect the other submarine before she detects you, you simply wait and let her come within range, then Bingo.
In wartime submarines fulfill the critical roles of INT gathering, sea denial, and search and destroy profiles. HK subs are usually SSNs and hence leverage their superior speed and sensors to deploy in ambush positions in advance while conventionals utlise preplanned ambush positions due to inferior sonar power and speed compared to SSNs but comparitively higher "stealth". It is rare for two submarines to blunder into each other but should they do or they detect each other at approx the same time then it rapidly becomes a knifefight in the dark as both boats attempt to gain a range and bearing count on the other to fire off torpedoes/decoys with passive sonars-active is only ever used by SSNs for obvious reasons. However in peacetime submarines attempt to track each other and discover as much about the acoustic signature and hull profiles of adversaries (and even allies) as much as possible. In these situations certain types of active sonar may be used for this purpose at the risk of revealing the location of your own boat (but with SSNs not so much risk).
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