Trebelev subterrene (Soviet Union)
A Subterrene is a vehicle that travels underground (through
solid rock/soil) much as a submarine travels underwater, either by mechanical
drilling, or by melting its way forward. Subterrenes existed first in fiction
as mechanical drillers, with real-world thermal designs and
examples following in the second half of the 20th century.
Fictional subterrenes are often depicted as cylindrical in
shape with conical drill heads at one or both ends, sometimes with some kind of
tank-tread for propulsion, and described either as leaving an empty tunnel
behind it, or as filling the space behind it with mining debris, the
plausibility of such machines has declined with the advent of the real-world
tunnel boring machines, which demonstrate the reality of the boring task.
Tunnel boring machine themselves are not usually considered to be subterrenes,
possibly because they lack the secondary attributes - mobility and independence
- that are normally applied to vehicles.
A real-world, mobile subterrene must work thermally, using
very high temperature and immense pressure to melt and push through rock, the
front of the machine is equipped with a stationary drill tip which is kept at
1,300–1,700 °F (700–930 °C). The molten rock is pushed around the edges as the
vehicle is forced forward, and cools to a glass-like lining of the tunnel.
Massive amounts of energy are required to heat the drill head, supplied via
nuclear power or electricity. Patents issued in the 1970s indicate that U.S.
scientists had planned to use nuclear power to liquefy lithium metal and
circulate it to the front of the machine (drill). An onboard nuclear reactor
can permit a truly independent subterrene, but cooling the reactor is a
difficult problem, the Soviet Union is purported to have built such a
"battle mole", which operated until its onboard reactor
failed.[citation needed]
On line information presents research was funded by the
United States Government for the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratories University
of California, Los Alamos, New Mexico for a project Camelot under the heading
Systems and Cost Analysis for a Nuclear Subterrene Tunneling Machine.
The design concepts fall into similar designs of current
technology of our nuclear submarine fleet and existing tunnel boring technology
as used in the Chunnel between England and France, but with the added feature
of melting rock for the tunnel wall lining.
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