Inside The Zumwalt Destroyer
The U.S. Navy's most futuristic warship finally hits the water.
Zumwalt In Maine
U.S. Navy
I went to Raytheon's Seapower Capability Center in Portsmouth, RI, to get a look inside the futuristic destroyer. The Zumwalt isn't there; it's waiting at Bath Iron Works in Maine. Instead, I'm here to see a mock-up of the bridge, the command center where sailors send and receive communications, plot courses, direct weapons, and generally see to the operations of the ship.
Mock-up Of Zumwalt Bridge
Raytheon
My guides frowned upon Star Trekcomparisons.
Besides the usual keyboard, trackball, and touchscreen, each computer station has a joystick. A Raytheon employee told me the joysticks aren't yet mapped to any function, but they could be configured to pilot drones. Poking around the central screen at one of the stations configured for weapons, I found a display map, flight paths, and a series of concentric circles representing incoming vehicles: gray for initiating contact, yellow for warning, and red for opening fire. More information about specific systems (the weapons used, sensors, engines) appears on the side monitors.And that's the bridge. Nineteen sailors per shift will control the ship from here, and computers will do the rest. The Zumwalt is expected to have a crew of only 154, about half that of the Arleigh Burke-class destroyers currently in service. What makes this possible is a tremendous degree of automation. Everything, from the valves leading to the showers to the turrets for the guns, is hooked into what's called the Total Ship Computing Environment. (My guides frowned upon Star Trek comparisons.) Rather than feeding the raw data from a pressure sensor in a pipe back to an engineer, the relevant computer responds accordingly, and then informs the crew member watching the pipes that the change happened.
Crew members will live relatively well. At the lowest rank, there will be four sailors per stateroom (and bathroom). The ship design calls for libraries and lounges, and there's additional sleeping space and room for other military personnel the Zumwalt might want to take aboard for special purposes. More on that later.
The Brains Of The Zumwalt
Raytheon
The ship's electricity comes from gas powered turbines, which together generate up to 78 megawatts of power. Under normal conditions, the operating systems of the ship and the engines use only 20 of those megawatts, so the ship has 58 left over for weapons. Especially future weapons: Railguns and lasers, both long in development for the Navy, could find a home on board the Zumwalt, which has more than enough electricity to meet these weapons' intense energy demands.
Zumwalt Missile Ports
Raytheon
It shows up on radar as nothing larger than a small fishing vessel.
Having the weapons to hit something is, at most, half the battle. Stealth is just as important. The Zumwalt's weird construction—sharp edges and sloping surfaces—mean that, according to Raytheon, it shows up on radar as nothing larger than a "small fishing vessel," despite being 610 feet long and displacing 15,000 tons of water. It has both the medium-frequency sonar typical of surface ships and the high-frequency sonar common in submarines. The onboard radar can simultaneously perform broad sweeps and narrow scanning. There's also a system of electronic eyes that catch both visual and infrared light and then analyze the images to determine if anything seen is a threat and warrants notifying a sailor on watch.Besides the tools for naval battle, the Zumwalt has a helipad big enough for either two helicopters or a helicopter and a vertical-takeoff drone. There's enough room on the Zumwalt to house two helicopter or drone crews, as well as room for two helicopters' worth of special forces, if need be. The V-22 Osprey, while a staple of vertical takeoff and tricky deployments, is too large and heavy for the Zumwalt's landing pad, but for most purposes, helicopters will be fine. Thanks to the ship's sensors, defenses, and stealth, it might very well get special forces into otherwise difficult-to-reach places.
Zumwalt Undergoing Construction
Raytheon
Star Trek Into Darkness, released this summer, features a warship called the Dreadnought that's heavily automated and designed to run on a very minimal crew. When, toward the end of my visit, I asked my hosts at Raytheon what they thought of this comparison, I was met with a hearty chorus of "no comment."
The U.S. Navy, on the other hand, seems ready for the science fiction comparisons. It looks like the first commander of the Zumwalt will be Captain James Kirk.
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