Autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) and investigations of the ice-ocean interface in Antarctic and Arctic waters

Julian A. Dowdeswell*, Jeff Evans, Ruth I. Mugford, Gary Griffiths, Stephen D. McPhail, N. Millard, Patrick Stevenson, Mark A. Brandon, C. Banks, Karen J. Heywood, M.R. Price, P. A. Dodd, Adrian Jenkins, Keith Nicholls, D.H. Hayes, E. Povl Abrahamsen, Paul Tyler, B. Bett, Derek Jones, P. WadhamsJ. P. Wilkinson, K. Stansfield, S. Ackley

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

75 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Limitations of access have long restricted exploration and investigation of the cavities beneath ice shelves to a small number of drillholes. Studies of sea-ice underwater morphology are limited largely to scientific utilization of submarines. Remotely operated vehicles, tethered to a mother ship by umbilical cable, have been deployed to investigate tidewater-glacier and ice-shelf margins, but their range is often restricted. The development of free-flying autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) with ranges of tens to hundreds of kilometres enables extensive missions to take place beneath sea ice and floating ice shelves. Autosub2 is a 3600kg, 6.7m long AUV, with a 1600m operating depth and range of 400km, based on the earlier Autosub1 which had a 500m depth limit. A single direct-drive d.c. motor and five-bladed propeller produce speeds of 1-2 ms-1. Rear-mounted rudder and stern-plane control yaw, pitch and depth. The vehicle has three sections. The front and rear sections are free-flooding, built around aluminium extrusion space-frames covered with glass-fibre reinforced plastic panels. The central section has a set of carbon-fibre reinforced plastic pressure vessels. Four tubes contain batteries powering the vehicle. The other three house vehicle-control systems and sensors. The rear section houses subsystems for navigation, control actuation and propulsion and scientific sensors (e.g. digital camera, upward-looking 300kHz acoustic Doppler current profiler, 200kHz multibeam receiver). The front section contains forward-looking collision sensor, emergency abort, the homing systems, Argos satellite data and location transmitters and flashing lights for relocation as well as science sensors (e.g. twin conductivity-temperature-depth instruments, multibeam transmitter, sub-bottom profiler, AquaLab water sampler). Payload restrictions mean that a subset of scientific instruments is actually in place on any given dive. The scientific instruments carried on Autosub are described and examples of observational data collected from each sensor in Arctic or Antarctic waters are given (e.g. of roughness at the underside of floating ice shelves and sea ice).

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)661-672
Number of pages12
JournalJournal of Glaciology
Volume54
Issue number187
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2008
Externally publishedYes

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