USS Seawolf off the coast of Key West, Florida, in 1958.
USS Seawolf
Under the direction
of Captain (later Admiral) Hyman Rickover, the US Navy developed both
pressurized water and liquid metal prototypes. The company completed its first
two nuclear submarines, the Nautilus and Seawolf, and tested the two types, but
the Seawolf reactor ran into problems (including leaks), so the liquid metal
concept was abandoned. The Navy then also developed natural circulation
reactors. US attack submarines (except the natural circulation prototype USS
Narwhal) are built with pressurized water reactors, while Ohio-class strategic
submarines are powered by natural circulation reactors. The latter are
inherently quieter than pressurized water units, since they do not require
pumps, at least at low and medium power.
Other
nuclear navies used pressurized water or natural circulation reactors, with one
exception: the Soviet Union's Alpha-class superfast attack submarines, built
with liquid metal reactors in the 1970s and 1980s.
Nuclear Navy
The
introduction of the new nuclear submarines had two far-reaching effects. First,
it introduced an entirely new type of submarine, the strategic submarine.
Second, it revolutionized anti-submarine warfare, with attack submarines
becoming the primary anti-submarine weapon. Attack submarines are equipped with
torpedoes and possibly anti-ship missiles. Strategic submarines can carry
similar weapons, but their primary weapons are submarine-launched ballistic
missiles (SLBMs) such as the US or UK Trident.
Strategic Submarines
Strategic
submarines are valuable because they are very difficult to find and destroy,
and as long-range SLBMs become more accurate, their importance increases.
Accurate missiles can destroy land-based missiles. If all strategic missiles
were deployed in such locations, the first to launch them could hope to disarm
the enemy. However, if a nuclear power deployed missiles at sea, such a
preemptive attack would be virtually impossible unless a breakthrough in
submarine detection was developed.

Between World War I and World War II, the world's naval interest in submarines remained strong. The British, French, and Japanese built improved versions, and during this period the United States Navy built its first large, long-range submarine .
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