DocumentCode
2080681
Title
Autonomous deep-ocean lander vehicles; modular approaches to design and operation
Author
Priede, Imants G. ; Addison, Steven ; Bradley, Scott ; Bagley, Phil M. ; Gray, Peter ; Yau, Cynthia ; Rolin, Jean-Francois ; Blandin, Jerome ; Legrand, Jacques ; Khripounoff, Alexis ; Vangriesheim, Annick ; Cremer, Axel ; Witte, Ursual ; Pfannkuche, Olaf
Author_Institution
Fac. of Sci. & Eng., Aberdeen Univ., UK
Volume
2
fYear
1998
fDate
28 Sep-1 Oct 1998
Firstpage
1120
Abstract
Deep-ocean landers are autonomous vehicles that descend to the sea floor and function autonomously without any connection to the surface for periods of 12 h to one year. At the end of the mission, ballast is released by acoustic command from the surface and the lander ascends by virtue of its buoyancy. Landers are made up of two components: a basic delivery system and the scientific payload. Experience with over 20 lander types within Europe has established some common design principles. The Aberdeen compact ATTIS lander combines experiment management, data storage, acoustic telemetry to the surface and ballast release control all within one unit. More typically a modular approach is used with the delivery system separated from the scientific payload. The scientific payload has its own power supply and different experiments on the same lander are autonomous so that failure of one does not affect the rest of the system. A modular architecture with the ability to change scientific payloads has proved most flexible and reliable. A CAN type network provides central data logging whilst maintaining functional autonomy of the different experimental modules
Keywords
oceanographic equipment; remotely operated vehicles; underwater vehicles; Aberdeen compact ATTIS lander; CAN type network; acoustic telemetry; autonomous deep-ocean lander vehicles; ballast release control; central data logging; data storage; delivery system; design principles; experiment management; experimental modules; modular architecture; modular design; operation; power supply; scientific payload; sea floor operation; Electronic ballasts; Europe; Memory; Mobile robots; Payloads; Power system management; Remotely operated vehicles; Sea floor; Sea surface; Telemetry;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
OCEANS '98 Conference Proceedings
Conference_Location
Nice
Print_ISBN
0-7803-5045-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/OCEANS.1998.724410
Filename
724410
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