安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
|
- Torpedo - Wikipedia
In 1866, Whitehead invented the first effective self-propelled torpedo, the eponymous Whitehead torpedo, the first modern torpedo French and German inventions followed closely, and the term torpedo came to describe self-propelled projectiles that traveled under or on water
- Torpedo | Naval Weapon, Submarine Warfare History | Britannica
Torpedo, cigar-shaped, self-propelled underwater missile, launched from a submarine, surface vessel, or airplane and designed for exploding upon contact with the hulls of surface vessels and submarines
- TORPEDO Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
Torpedo comes to English by way of Latin torpēdō, which has two quite different meanings It refers to a state of inertness, sluggishness, or lethargy, and it refers to a creature also known as the electric ray
- Navy’s Use of Torpedoes - NHHC
Torpedo development was minimal during World War I The Mk 7 was the first steam-driven torpedo that could be fired from both destroyers and submarines The post-World War I pre- World War II
- Torpedo - The Evolution And Impact Of Torpedoes
Few weapons in naval warfare have captured the imagination and shaped maritime strategy quite like the torpedo From its humble beginnings as a crude, unreliable explosive device to its modern incarnation as a sophisticated, guided underwater missile, the torpedo has revolutionized naval combat
- Torpedoes - Naval Encyclopedia
Robert Whitehead’s Invention: The modern torpedo was pioneered by Robert Whitehead, an English engineer In 1866, he developed the first self-propelled torpedo in Fiume (modern-day Rijeka, Croatia) This torpedo could travel underwater, maintaining a set depth and course toward its target
- NATO Video Shows Devastating Impact of a Heavyweight Torpedo
NATO's Allied Joint Force Command has released a rare video of a submarine torpedoing a decommissioned vessel, filmed in high definition from on boar
- Torpedoes - National Museum of American History
Click diagram to enlarge The Mark 48 torpedo is the standard torpedo on all U S submarines First entering service in 1971, it is 19 feet (6 m) long, 21 inches (53 cm) in diameter, and weighs 3,450 pounds (1,565 kg) with a 650-pound (295-kg) explosive warhead
|
|
|