Iran Daily

Silent robots listen to ocean winds

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Scientists are using small submersibl­e robots to listen to the wind out at sea. The 1.5m-long, 50kg sea-gliders carry hydrophone­s that pick up the noise underwater being made by the weather at the surface, according to bbc.com.

The researcher­s said the robots can provide additional informatio­n on wind and storm patterns where meteorolog­ical stations are scarce. This is particular­ly true out over the oceans.

Pierre Cauchy, a PHD researcher from the University of East Anglia, the UK, said, “I’m attaching passive acoustics monitoring sensors to autonomous submarines with the aim of developing new ways to monitor the oceans.

“For each deployment of a glider, it takes a day to put it in the water, but then the robot goes off for a few months to collect its data.”

Cauchy was explaining his work here at the European Geoscience­s Union (EGU) General Assembly in Vienna, Austria.

The sound energy from high winds at the surface propagates down to the submersibl­e which senses the noise at frequencie­s in the 2-10khz range.

The UEA researcher said, “The faster the wind, the louder the sound.”

Satellites already judge wind speed over remote ocean locations by measuring surface roughness.

To the spacecraft, calm conditions look very different compared with choppy seas. But the hydrophone-equipped gliders can be used to ground-truth this satellite informatio­n.

Cauchy said, “Gliders allow you to go places you can’t go with a boat or a buoy. For example, you could send them into a hurricane.”

The robots are very hands-off. They are propelled by their buoyancy. A bladder is alternatel­y filled and deflated with water, and then, as the robots rise and fall in the water column, their wings guide them forward.

The lack of a motor of any kind means they run silent and therefore capture completely clean acoustic data.

This can either be pulled off the glider when it is recovered, or transmitte­d back via a sat-phone signal when the robot sticks its antenna out of the water.

Of course, the UEA gliders are capturing all manner of ocean sounds. These include the noise of chattering fish, echolocati­on clicks from whales, and the increasing din coming from human activities — from the likes of ship traffic and seismic surveys.

Cauchy spoke of new applicatio­ns. One recent project found an associatio­n between the health of marine flowering plants — ‘seagrasses’ — and fish noise.

He said, “With your gliders, you could cruise along the shore and know the health of the ecosystem just by listening to the fish.”

Other uses for glider-captured sounds would include the study of whale population densities and in monitoring illegal fishing activity in no-take zones.

 ??  ?? Deploying a sea-glider for a months’ long mission. bbc.com
Deploying a sea-glider for a months’ long mission. bbc.com

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