The first undersea voyage to the North Pole

🚢 USS Nautilus: First Submarine to Complete Undersea Voyage to North Pole

🗓️ Date of Voyage Completion: August 3, 1958

🗞️ Source: The Hindu, Updated – August 03, 2025 | 12:26 PM IST


🔹 Why in News?

  • August 3, 2025 marks the 67th anniversary of the first undersea voyage to the North Pole completed by USS Nautilus (SSN-571), the world’s first nuclear-powered submarine.
  • The mission, Operation Sunshine, made history by navigating beneath the Arctic ice cap and surfacing in the Greenland Sea.

🔹 About USS Nautilus

  • Commissioned: September 30, 1954
  • First Nuclear Run: January 17, 1955
  • Length: ~320 feet; Displacement: 3,000+ tons
  • Power Source: Pressurized water reactor (PWR) using slightly enriched uranium
  • Built by: General Dynamics (Electric Boat Division), Reactor by Westinghouse
  • Engineered by: Capt. Hyman G. Rickover (Father of the Nuclear Navy)

🔹 Historic Arctic Voyage (1958)

  • Start: July 23, 1958 – Pearl Harbor, Hawaii
  • Passed North Coast of Alaska: August 1
  • Reached North Pole: August 3, 11:15 PM EDT
  • Surface: August 5 – Greenland Sea
  • End: August 7 – Iceland
  • Depth Navigated: ~500 feet under ice caps (10–50 ft thick)
  • Crew: 116 (Commander William R. Anderson, 111 officers/crew, 4 scientists)

🔹 Significance

  • First vessel in history to reach North Pole underwater
  • Revolutionized naval operations with unlimited submerged endurance
  • Proved nuclear propulsion viability for long-range strategic missions
  • Laid foundation for modern nuclear submarines and civilian PWR reactors

🔹 Scientific and Strategic Impact

  • Pressurized Water Reactor (PWR) model is still used today in civilian nuclear power plants.
  • Marked shift in submarine warfare: stealth, endurance, and strategic deterrence.
  • Accelerated Cold War-era technological competition and Arctic geopolitical interest.