Title :
ALOHA cabled observatory installation
Author :
Howe, Bruce M. ; Lukas, Roger ; Duennebier, Fred ; Karl, David
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Ocean & Earth Sci. & Technol., Univ. of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, HI, USA
Abstract :
At 10:23 am on 6 June 2011, the ALOHA Cabled Observatory (ACO) saw “first light,” extending power, network communications and timing to a seafloor node and instruments at 4726 m water depth 100 km north of Oahu. Station ALOHA is the field site of the Hawaii Ocean Time-series (HOT) program that has investigated temporal dynamics in biology, physics, and chemistry since 1988. HOT conducts near monthly ship-based sampling and makes continuous observations from moored instruments to document and study climate and ecosystem variability over semi-diurnal to decadal time scales. The cabled observatory system will provide the infrastructure for continuous, interactive ocean sampling enabling new measurements as well as a new mode of ocean observing that integrates ship and cabled observations. The ACO is a prototypical example of a deep observatory system that uses a retired first-generation fiber-optic telecommunications cable. The system was installed using ROV Jason operated from the R/V Kilo Moana. Here we provide an overview of the system and instrumentation, the installation operation, and a sample of initial data. Sensors now connected to the ACO provide live video of the surrounding seafloor, sound from local and distant sources, and measure currents, pressure, temperature, and salinity.
Keywords :
ocean chemistry; ocean temperature; oceanographic regions; oceanographic techniques; optical fibre communication; seafloor phenomena; AD 2011 06 06; ALOHA Cabled Observatory; HOT program; Hawaii Ocean Time-series program; Oahu; R/V Kilo Moana; ROV Jason; cabled observation; climate variability; continuous interactive ocean sampling; current measurement; deep observatory system; depth 4726 m; ecosystem variability; fiber-optic telecommunications cable; moored instruments; network communication; pressure measurement; salinity; seafloor node; seafloor video; ship-based sampling; temperature measurement; temporal dynamics; Instruments; Observatories; Oceans; Power cables; Power supplies; Sensors; Underwater cables; abyssal flow; ocean acoustics; ocean observing; seafloor video; sustained sampling;
Conference_Titel :
OCEANS 2011
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-1427-6