Periscopes allow a
submarine, when submerged at a relatively shallow depth, to search visually for nearby targets and threats on the surface of the water and in the air. When not in use, a submarine's periscope retracts into the
hull. A submarine commander in tactical conditions must exercise discretion when using his periscope, since it creates a visible wake (and may also become detectable by
radar), giving away the submarine's position. Marie-Davey built a simple, fixed naval periscope using mirrors in 1854. Thomas H. Doughty of the
United States Navy later invented a prismatic version for use in the
American Civil War of 1861–1865. Submarines adopted periscopes early. Captain
Arthur Krebs adapted two on the experimental French submarine in 1888 and 1889. The Spanish inventor
Isaac Peral equipped his submarine (developed in 1886 but launched on September 8, 1888) with a fixed, non-retractable periscope that used a combination of prisms to relay the image to the submariner. (Peral also developed a primitive
gyroscope for submarine navigation and pioneered the ability to fire live
torpedoes while submerged.) The invention of the collapsible periscope for use in submarine warfare is usually credited to
Simon Lake in 1902. Lake called his device the "omniscope" or "skalomniscope". modern submarine periscopes incorporate lenses for magnification and function as
telescopes. They typically employ
prisms and
total internal reflection instead of mirrors, because prisms, which do not require coatings on the reflecting surface, are much more rugged than mirrors. They may have additional optical capabilities such as
range-finding and targeting. The mechanical systems of submarine periscopes typically use
hydraulics and need to be quite sturdy to withstand the drag through water. The periscope chassis may also support a radio or radar antenna. Submarines traditionally had two periscopes: a navigation or observation periscope and a targeting, or commander's, periscope. Navies originally mounted these periscopes in the
conning tower, one forward of the other in the narrow hulls of diesel-electric submarines. In the much wider hulls of
US Navy submarines the two operate side-by-side. The observation scope, used to scan the sea surface and sky, typically had a wide field of view and no magnification or low-power magnification. The targeting or "attack" periscope, by comparison, had a narrower field of view and higher magnification. In World War II and earlier submarines, it was the only means of gathering target data to accurately fire a torpedo, since
sonar was not yet sufficiently advanced for this purpose (ranging with sonar required emission of an acoustic "ping" that gave away the location of the submarine) and most torpedoes were unguided. Twenty-first-century submarines do not necessarily have periscopes. The United States Navy's s and the
Royal Navy's s instead use
photonics masts, pioneered by the Royal Navy's , which lift an electronic imaging sensor-set above the water. Signals from the sensor-set travel electronically to workstations in the submarine's control center. While the cables carrying the signal must penetrate the submarine's hull, they use a much smaller and more easily sealed—and therefore less expensive and safer—hull opening than those required by periscopes. Eliminating the telescoping tube running through the conning tower also allows greater freedom in designing the pressure hull and in placing internal equipment. ==Aircraft use==