The REMUS 6000 Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV),
employing a wide array of underwater sensors, was critical to finding the
wreckage of Air France flight 447. AF447 was en-route from Brazil to France
when it encountered icing conditions over the Atlantic Ocean which blocked its
pitot tubes, which are used to measure the aircraft's speed. The pilots
responded incorrectly, stalling the airplane and ultimately crashing it into
the ocean, killing all of the occupants (Ferrante, Kutzleb & Purcell,
2011).
The REMUS 6000 incorporates
numerous sensors to determine its position and navigate. Underwater navigation
requires aggregating the data from many sources to determine an accurate
position and track. To this end, it uses an Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU)
that records linear and angular accelerations to estimate its travel from a
known location. Augmenting this estimation is an Acoustic Doppler Current
Profiler (ADCP), which takes acoustic measurements of the vehicle's movement
over the seabed. Two transducers receive acoustic position data from Deep Ocean
Transmitters (DOTs) pre-lain in known locations. The vehicle is equipped with a
Global Positioning System (GPS) receiver, but this sensor is only usable on the
water surface. To avoid collisions, the vehicle uses a pencil-beam sonar
collision avoidance system that informs the control system of obstacles in the
AUV's immediate path necessitating evasive action. Depth is measured using a
pressure sensor combined with the ADCP measurement. The vehicle is also
equipped with a conductivity (salinity) sensor and ground fault detection
(Kongsberg, 2012).
To search the ocean floor for
wreckage, the purpose-built REMUS 6000 uses several exteroperceptive sensors,
many developed specifically for the underwater environment. It uses Edgetech
dual frequency side-scan sonar sensors to map the topography of the ocean floor
and search for sonar returns characteristic of man-made objects, 400 to 700
meters to the left and right of the vehicle (Ferrante, Kutzleb & Purcell,
2011). It uses these sensors in a raster pattern. These are similar to side
scan radar used on aircraft, but radio waves dissipate too quickly underwater,
thus acoustic waves are used instead. When an object of interest is found, the
REMUS 6000 employs a multi-beam profiling sonar, which creates a 3-dimensional
sonar image. To confirm the existence of wreckage, the vehicle uses an
electro-optical imager synchronized to a strobe light. When searching a known
debris field, the vehicle employs a sub-bottom profiling sonar to search for
buried debris (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, 2012).
Would the REMUS 6000 be more
effective if paired with an Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS)? Without some idea
of where to begin to search, AUVs are very ineffective tools. AUVs scan the
ocean bottom slowly (1-4 knots). Aircraft, manned and unmanned, scan the ocean
surface much faster than AUVs scan the ocean floor. Any floating debris or oil
slicks indicative of the last known position (LKP) of the aircraft will narrow
the underwater search considerably and make the REMUS 6000 more effective.
AF447's wreckage was found 6.5 nautical miles from its LKP (Ferrante,
Kutzleb & Purcell, 2011).
Are AUVs more or less
effective at carrying underwater sensing equipment than a manned submersible?
Both vehicles are capable of carrying and employing the same sensors. However,
a manned submersible carries a great deal of superfluous equipment, not the
least of which being its human occupants. AUVs are smaller and more
hydrodynamic, require less power for operation and locomotion, and only require
small pressure vessels for its equipment and flood the remainder of the vehicle
(Christ & Wernli, 2013). In the event of a catastrophic failure of the
power system of pressure vessels, AUVs ideally jettison ballast and return to
the surface. A manned sub can do the same, but possibly endangering its
occupants. If an AUV can perform the same sensory tasks, perhaps this implies a
moral obligation not to put humans in harm's way. Finally, the REMUS 6000 can
perform its sensing missions for up to 16 hours. Human factors would preclude a
manned submarine from staying on station for that amount of time.
Are there any conceivable ways
to improve upon the REMUS 6000's role in underwater search and rescue? Without
being part of the design process, it is difficult to understand all of the
system level trade offs. One idea is to simply increase the vehicle's battery
size, ideally resulting in a longer time on station. However, since the data
must be downloaded directly from the vehicle, perhaps 16 hours is the longest
interval that its designers wanted to wait for data. Another idea is to employ
a small, go-between AUV that offloads the large datasets from the REMUS 6000
and returns them to the control vessel.
References:
Ferrante, B., Kutzleb, B,
Purcell, M. (2011). AF477 Underwater Search and Recovery Operations: A
Shared Government-Industry Process. Sterling, VA: International
Society of Aviation Safety Investigators.
Christ, R. & Wernli, R.
(2013). The ROV Manual, Second Edition. Oxford: Elsevier/
Butterworth-Heinemann Press.
REMUS 6000 Specifications.
(2012). Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Oceanographic Systems Laboratory.
Woods Hole, MA. Retrieved 22 January 2015, from http://www.whoi.edu/page.do?pid=105976 (Links
to an external site.)
REMUS 6000 Datasheet. (2012).
Kongsberg: Hydroid, Inc. Retrieved 22 January 2015, from http://www.km.kongsberg.com/ (Links
to an external site.)
I smiled when you referred to occupants of a sub as superfluous equipment.
ReplyDeleteI thought about the same system improvement of increased endurance, but you mentioned the data transmission and storage limit that may impact how long the system can stay "down" independent of battery life. I hadn't thought of this. Bravo to you.
I'd venture that the rate of data storage improvement in technology is going faster than the rate of battery life improvement and as such storage of the collected data isn't much of a constraint. After all we now have 1 TB thumb drives, but haven't seen the same improvement in battery power density.
v/r
Andrew
This was well-written and informative, Stephen. It is amazing that the REMES 6000 was able to locate the wreckage in 3,900 meters of water. One of the interesting things I learned about the ROV was that it lacks the sophistication to avoid obstacles as indicated by Maggie Koerth-Baker (2011) quoting Mark Purcell of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute.
ReplyDeleteReferences:
Koerth-Baker, M. (2011). Air France 447: How scientists found a needle in a haystack. BoingBoing. Retrieved from http://boingboing.net/2011/05/06/air-france-447-how-s.html