|
Thirty-Two
Mile Cable Installed for First Deep-Sea Observatory
Step toward making
Monterey Bay seafloor accessible to scientists 24 hours a day
April 4, 2007
An
illustration of the MARS undersea observatory shows its
cabled links.
Credit:
David Fierstein, MBARI
|
Oceanographers have
completed an important step in constructing the first deep-sea
observatory off the continental United States. Workers in the
multi-institution effort laid 32 miles (52 kilometers) of cable
along the Monterey Bay sea floor that will provide electrical
power to scientific instruments, video cameras, and robots 3,000
feet (900 meters) below the ocean surface. The link will also
carry data from the instruments back to shore, for use by
scientists and engineers from around the world.
The Monterey Accelerated
Research System (MARS) observatory, due to be completed later
this year, will provide ocean scientists with 24-hour-a-day
access to instruments and experiments in the deep sea. The
project is managed by the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research
Institute (MBARI) and funded by the National Science Foundation
(NSF).
Currently, almost all
oceanographic instruments in the deep sea rely on batteries for
power and store their data on hard disks or memory chips until
they are brought back to the surface. With a continuous and
uninterrupted power supply, instruments attached to the MARS
observatory could remain on the sea floor for months or years.
"MARS represents the first
step in a long-planned process to transform the way the oceans
are studied," said Julie Morris, director of NSF's Division
of Ocean Sciences. "Marine scientists will no longer be
required to go out to the ocean for their studies. The ocean is
about to come into their offices."
If something goes wrong with
the instruments, scientists will know immediately, and will be
able to recover or reprogram them as necessary.
Slightly thicker than a garden
hose, the MARS cable is buried about 3 feet below the sea floor
along most of its route, so it will not be disturbed by boat
anchors or fishing gear.
The cable itself contains a
copper electrical conductor and strands of optical fiber. The
copper conductor will transmit up to 10 kilowatts of power from a
shore station at Moss Landing, Calif., to instruments on the sea
floor. The optical fiber will carry up to 2 gigabits per second
of data from these instruments back to researchers on shore,
allowing scientists to monitor and control instruments 24 hours a
day, and to have an unprecedented view of how environmental
conditions in the deep sea change over time.
"After 5 years of hard
work, we are thrilled to bring the age of the Internet to the
deep ocean, so we can understand, appreciate and protect the
two-thirds of our planet that lies under the sea," said
MBARI director Marcia McNutt. "We are grateful for the help
of our talented partners and visionary sponsors. MARS has truly
been a team effort."
At the seaward end of the MARS
cable is a large steel frame about 4 feet (1.2 meters) tall and
15 feet (4.6 meters) on each side. This "trawl-resistant
frame" will protect the electronic "guts" of the
MARS observatory, which will serve as a computer network hub and
electrical substation in the deep sea. The researchers hope to
install these electronic components into the trawl-resistant
frame in the fall of 2007.
After the electronics package
is installed and tested, scientists from around the world will be
able to attach their instruments to the observatory using
underwater extension cords. These instruments will be carried
down from the surface and plugged into the science node using
MBARI's remotely operated vehicles.
MARS also will serve as a
testing ground for technology that will be used on more ambitious
deep-sea observatories. As planned, such observatories will use
thousands of kilometers of undersea cables to hook up dozens of
seismographs and oceanographic monitoring stations. They will
provide scientists with new views of sea floor life, and a new
understanding of the global tectonic processes that spawn
earthquakes and tsunamis.
"MARS is the harbinger of
an international ocean observatory network that will enable
scientists to study ocean features and changing conditions,"
said Morris. "New ocean observing capabilities will provide
knowledge about the ocean, and information to better manage and
preserve ocean resources."
The MARS project was initiated
in 2002 with $8 million in grants from the National Science
Foundation (NSF) and $1.75 million from the David and Lucille
Packard Foundation. NSF also contributed an additional $2 million
to meet permitting and homeland security requirements. Components
for the observatory are being designed and built by MBARI, the
University of Washington, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution,
Nautronics Maripro, and Alcatel.
Source:
NSF

|