DocumentCode
2966930
Title
Initial Deployments of the Rover, an Autonomous Bottom-Transecting Instrument Platform for Long-Term Measurements in Deep Benthic Environments
Author
McGill, P.R. ; Sherman, A.D. ; Hobson, B.W. ; Henthorn, R.G. ; Chase, A.C. ; Smith, K.L.
Author_Institution
Monterey Bay Aquarium Res. Inst., Monterey
fYear
2007
fDate
Sept. 29 2007-Oct. 4 2007
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
7
Abstract
Rover is a bottom-crawling, autonomous vehicle capable of making continuous time-series measurements at abyssal depths up to 6000 m for periods exceeding six months. The Rover control system and instrumentation suite are being designed at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI), building on the earlier rover work of Smith and associates at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. The vehicle weighs 68 kg in water and crawls on two wide tracks with a combined surface contact area of about one square meter; this provides good traction while minimizing the disturbance to benthic sediments. A typical mission scenario is to take measurements for a few days at each site before picking up the instruments and moving forward ~10 m to a new site. Up to fifty sites may be visited in a single mission. Engineering field tests have been performed with the Rover in the Monterey Bay in California (890 m depth), and at Station M, 220 km west of the central California coast (4200 m depth). Rover operations have been observed with the ROVs Ventana and Tiburon, and with the manned submersible DSV Alvin. Knowledge gained from these engineering deployments has resulted in numerous modifications and improvements to The Rover.
Keywords
oceanographic equipment; remotely operated vehicles; underwater equipment; underwater vehicles; DSV Alvin; MBARI; Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute; autonomous bottom-transecting instrument; benthic sediments; bottom-crawling autonomous vehicle; deep benthic environments; depth 6000 m; manned submersible; rover control system; Buildings; Control systems; Instruments; Marine vehicles; Mobile robots; Remotely operated vehicles; Sea measurements; Sea surface; Sediments; Testing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
OCEANS 2007
Conference_Location
Vancouver, BC
Print_ISBN
978-0933957-35-0
Electronic_ISBN
978-0933957-35-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/OCEANS.2007.4449315
Filename
4449315
Link To Document