Underwater drones are changing the way scientists study the sea.
From NYT
Five miles offshore from the Golden Nugget casino, Michael F. Crowley, a marine scientist at Rutgers University, heaves three lifeboat-yellow drones off the back of his research vessel.
The gliders, as he calls them, are winged and propellerless, like
miniature Tomahawk missiles.
Two are on loan from the Navy, and one,
Rutgers’s own, is pockmarked from a past shark attack.
As they slink
into the Atlantic to begin a monthlong mission, they join a fleet of 12
others across the Eastern Seaboard, from Nova Scotia to Georgia.
Michael F. Crowley, a marine scientist at Rutgers,
with a glider on loan
from the Navy
being used in a large-scale ocean-survey experiment in
the Atlantic.
These drones are the centerpiece of “Gliderpalooza,”
a collaborative ocean-survey experiment coordinated by 16 American and
Canadian government agencies and research teams.
By pooling their
resources, including satellites, radar stations, research buoys and the
gliders, the teams hope to capture the most complete picture yet of the
Atlantic’s many mysterious underwater movements — from deepwater
currents to migrating fish.
Ocean researchers are also planning to deploy gliders in the Western Pacific to help forecast storms like Typhoon Haiyan.
While a typhoon’s path is largely influenced by atmospheric changes,
gliders can help predict a storm’s intensity, which is affected by ocean
temperatures.
“If we can better predict the intensity, we can better predict the human
impact,” said Scott M. Glenn, an oceanographer at Rutgers, “and that’s
critical, especially in Asia, where so many people die when these
typhoons make landfall.”
The mid-Atlantic experiment heralds a new direction in ocean research.
Despite a network of ocean-observing satellites and several projects
that have seeded the seas with data-logging buoys, the sheer size and
complexity of the oceans still mask much of what goes on underwater.
At a
time when forecasts of storms, currents and the effects of climate
change have never been needed more, the researchers hope their flotilla
of gliders will provide a new perspective.
“We have satellites that give us wonderful maps of the ocean at the surface,” said Dr. Glenn, the leader of the Mid-Atlantic Regional Association Coastal Ocean Observing System,
one of the 16 research groups involved in the project. (It goes by the
acronym Maracoos.)
“But the ocean is 3D, and we want to explore what’s
going on beneath the waves.”
The battery-powered gliders continually dive in long swooping curves,
taking snapshots of the ocean’s temperature, currents and other features
at a range of depths.
They reach a maximum depth of roughly 650 feet,
though they can be configured to go deeper; that is relatively shallow
for most of the ocean, but more than deep enough for continental
shelves, which are on average 460 feet below sea level and can extend
from a few thousand feet to hundreds of miles offshore.
Each glider costs $125,000 to $150,000, depending on instrumentation, a
bargain compared with traditional methods.
“A research vessel can cost
anywhere from $35,000 to almost $100,000 per day,” said Oscar
M. Schofield, an ocean scientist at Rutgers who is leading the
experiment.
“If you were to try to do this same experiment with ships,
it would cost on the order of millions to tens of millions of dollars.”
While each of the 15 gliders has its own mission, the data they collect
is being combined at Rutgers to investigate much larger questions.
“We
know that our ocean has changed quite a bit over the last 20 years,” Dr.
Schofield said, “but we have so little data, it’s hard to even start
unraveling what the drivers of that change are.”
Perhaps the most pressing question is the shape and movement of the
seasonal “cold pool,” a poorly understood body of water that rests at
the bottom of the Northeast Continental Shelf.
Researchers and fishermen have known for almost a century that while the
coastal Atlantic warms in spring and summer, an enormous stretch of
water stays abnormally frigid, trapped at the bottom.
This cold pool
stretches almost the length of the continental shelf, in a shifting band
from Cape Cod to Cape Hatteras.
As fall returns and the surface of the Atlantic starts to chill, the
cold pool will either slowly homogenize with the cooling surface waters
or mix together rapidly as storms move over the ocean. But much is still
largely unknown.
“The cold pool affects lots of migratory fish,” which follow the cooler
waters, Dr. Schofield said. “But it’s also important for informing storm
forecasting, because the ocean’s temperature is essentially the fuel
tank for storms.”
In August 2011, when Hurricane Irene moved over the cold pool, “the
hurricane mixed the warm water at the top of the ocean and the cold pool
at the bottom, which extinguished the intensity of that storm,” Dr.
Glenn said.
He added that one reason Hurricane Sandy
struck so fiercely in 2012 may have been that the storm traversed the
sea after the cold pool had already equalized with the ocean’s surface
temperature, “and so that mixing, that fire extinguisher, wasn’t there.”
Researchers, who have relied on satellites, hope to get a different perspective from the gliders.
Ocean drones have been used around the world for a decade, often to survey conditions too dangerous for humans.
“But this represents an important step in the maturation of the
technology,” said Timothy J. Cowles, a researcher with the Ocean
Observatories Initiative, who is not involved with Gliderpalooza.
“It’s
one thing to have a single glider making its own measurements, but it’s
quite another thing to have an entire fleet of gliders coordinated
between various research groups."
Though the gliders swim at a snail’s pace, a little over one mile an
hour, their mobility grants the researchers an unprecedented capacity to
adapt their experiments, said Joshua T. Kohut, a Rutgers oceanographer
with the Maracoos research team.
“Every two to three hours they come to the surface, which gives us an
opportunity to provide new instructions,” he said. “If we see the cold
pool has shifted or something has moved, we can respond to that.”
There are several models of submersible research drones on the market,
but the Gliderpalooza fleet consists of propellerless Slocum Gliders,
designed by the Teledyne Webb Research Corporation.
They move by
adjusting their buoyancy — taking on and expelling small amounts of
water to rise and fall in the ocean.
Two wings transform this
up-and-down movement into forward momentum, propelling the robot in a
continuous chain of swoops.
The Navy, the largest user of underwater drones, has 65 gliders helping forecast ocean weather worldwide through the Naval Oceanographic Office, including the two on loan for Gliderpalooza.
“Participating in this experiment gives us the opportunity to evaluate
the quality of our own ocean models and to share the lessons we’ve
learned,” said Kenneth P. Grembowicz, the oceanographic director at the
office.
Many of the research teams are already planning new, collective
experiments for their gliders.
Of the two glider missions on track for
next year, one will study and forecast storms on the East Coast, while
another will take Gliderpalooza’s multi-institution approach and apply
it on a global scale.
“These are an infinite number of ways we can
explore the ocean that we couldn’t before,” Dr. Glenn said.
“This is
opening up whole new horizons.”
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