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| Carl Sagan's COSMOS is one of the most influential science programs ever made.
Q. Does the moon have a dark side?
A. The moon does have a far side which is impossible to see from the earth, but it doesn't mean that it's always dark. Each side of the moon is dark for no longer than 15 days at a time.
Q. Where does sound come from?
A. The air is always filled with sound waves. All things give off vibrations, but some have a low frequency which most cannot hear. The reason: it may take 3 minutes to make a single vibration. They may be caused by earthquakes and storms.
Did You Know?
The microwave was invented after a researcher walked by a radar tube and a chocolate bar melted in his pocket.
Coke-a-Cola was originally green.
Rubberbands last longer when refrigerated.
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Deep Sea Technology Is Put To The Test In
Campus Tank
by Phil Sneiderman for Johns Hopkins University
Tethered Robotic Sub Helps Engineers Refine
Computerized Navigation, Control Systems
In a new indoor tank filled with almost 43,000 gallons of water, Johns
Hopkins engineers are developing and testing computer control systems to
serve as the "brains" for some of the world's leading deep sea robotic
exploration vehicles. To promote advances in underwater robotics, the
Whiting School of Engineering recently constructed the circular
hydrodynamics tank, 14 feet deep and 25 feet in diameter, inside a large
lab space within Maryland Hall.
In the tank, researchers are testing the JHU Remotely Operated Vehicle,
a small underwater robot developed at the university. Its navigation and
control systems, also developed at Johns Hopkins, have recently been
adapted and enhanced for use in the much larger Jason II vehicle, a new
deep-sea oceanographic research robot operated by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. The
Johns Hopkins navigation program also has been deployed aboard the Deep
Submergence Vehicle Alvin, Woods Hole's inhabited oceanographic
submersible.
 |
| Photo A: Louis Whitcomb supervises
underwater robotics research at Johns Hopkins, including a new lab
that features a tank filled with nearly 43,000 gallons of
water. Photo by Jay Van
Rensselaer |
Future navigation and control techniques devised in the new test tank
are expected to improve the operations of deep-sea robots such as Jason II
and Isis, a similar vessel that Woods Hole is developing for the
University of Southampton in the United Kingdom.
 "Our research goal is to develop new technology to enable new
oceanographic research," says Louis Whitcomb, associate
professor in the Department of Mechanical
Engineering, who is director of the new testing facility. "Moreover,
we collaborate with other institutions like the National Deep Submergence
Facility at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution to deploy these new
technologies for ocean science on vehicles such as Jason II and Alvin."
Deep sea robots like Jason II are relatively new but increasingly
important tools for scientists who want to explore some of Earth's most
remote and hostile frontiers. Human scuba divers can descend safely only
about 300 feet, or 100 meters. Yet the deepest parts of the ocean lie
11,000 meters below the surface. To explore greater depths, scientists in
the 1960s began building small inhabited submersibles. Such vessels have
been used to explore the R.M.S. Titanic's wreckage. But because such
vehicles must carry their own fuel and air supplies, explorers are limited
to eight to 12 hours per dive.
To overcome these limitations, engineers in the last 15 years have
begun building uninhabited robotic vehicles that remain tethered to a
research ship on the surface. Long cables feed power and instructions to
the submersible and retrieve images and other data. These vehicles usually
are equipped with video cameras to allow researchers to see what the
vehicle "sees" in real time. They often possess robotic arms to collect
artifacts, rocks and biological samples.
 |
| Photo B: Doctoral student James
Kinsey prepares to test the navigation and control systems that
guide the lab's underwater robot. Photo by Jay Van
Rensselaer |
"The deep ocean is a cold, dark, high-pressure, inhospitable
environment, and this equipment must be able to operate reliably under
these conditions," Whitcomb says. "Inhabited deep submersibles, such as
the U.S. Deep Submergence Vehicle Alvin, remain the only way for humans to
directly observe the benthic floor with their own eyes. Deep-diving
submarines are ideal for many tasks, yet they have limited endurance. One
advantage of an uninhabited submersible is that it can explore the deepest
parts of the ocean 24 hours a day, seven days a week, under the remote
control of science teams that are working around the clock aboard the
mother ship."
Operating a robotic vehicle from a great distance poses certain
challenges, however, and that's where Whitcomb's team comes in. "Our lab
focuses on two key problems that occur in the design of remotely operated
undersea vehicles: navigation and control," Whitcomb says. "One of the
most difficult things about maneuvering an underwater vehicle is that you
need to know where it is. What, precisely, is its position and orientation
on our planet? To determine these things, we've developed a computer
system that integrates signals from a dozen on-board sensors to compute
the submersible's position and velocity."
Based on this information, an operator on the surface can use a
joystick to move the undersea robot in three dimensions. The control
system developed by Whitcomb and his students also allows an operator to
tell a computer precisely where the vehicle should be located; the
software then automatically moves the vehicle to that point. At the new
Johns Hopkins hydrodynamics lab, researchers are fine tuning this system
by sending commands over a tether line to six electric thrusters mounted
upon the test submersible.
At sea, researchers on the surface can use this same system to
carefully control a larger underwater robot's movements, instructing the
vehicle to move in a precise grid pattern. This allows the sub to collect
the images and sonar data needed to produce photographic and topographic
maps of sections of the ocean's floor that contain interesting geological,
biological or archaeological features. Whitcomb says his computer system
also can direct a submersible to hover just 6 to 12 inches above the ocean
floor, close enough to collect samples without disturbing ecologically
sensitive surfaces. "With this system," he says, "we can control a
vehicle's position to within a few centimeters and its heading to within a
degree."
Whitcomb supervises underwater robotics research at Johns Hopkins as
director of the Dynamical
Systems and Control Laboratory. The JHU Remotely Operated Vehicle was
designed and built by one of his doctoral students, David Smallwood.
Another of Whitcomb's doctoral students, James Kinsey, is refining the
underwater navigation system at the new testing tank. Other Johns Hopkins
marine and oceanographic researchers will have access to the new tank.
Funds for construction of the tank and related research were provided by
the National Science Foundation.
Video footage and color photos of the JHU sub and test tank
available; contact Phil Sneiderman
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