Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Rutgers.edu | First successful underwater crossing of the Atlantic by an unmanned vehicle


The Scarlet Knight
, named for sponsoring Rutgers University's mascot, is a cruise-missile-shaped autonomous ROV that was launched off the New Jersey coastline on April 27. If all goes according to plan, the Rutgers team will recover it off the westernmost coast of Spain right around Christmas day. That happy event would mark the first successful underwater crossing of the Atlantic by an unmanned vehicle. At the mission website, you can track the robot's position using Google Earth, monitor her battery status, and follow the team's navigation blog.

The yellow glider, which resembles a rocket with wings on its sides, traveled the 7,400 kilometres (4,600 miles) between New Jersey on the US east coast and Galicia in Spain's northwestern coast in 225 days using only a battery and aided ocean currents. It was brought ashore on Friday at Baiona, the town where Christopher Columbus landed in 1493 during the return journey from his initial trip to the Americas.

Spanish Transport Minister Jose Blanco handed the robot to Jerry Miller of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy at a ceremony held in Baiona. "We are going to continue to cooperate in initiatives like this," he said.

The robot -- which can reach depths of 200 metres (650 feet) and survive storms -- gathered information on ocean currents and salt levels as well as temperature during its voyage.

It will now be put on display at the Smithsonian museum in Washington while a replica of the glider will be on view in Baiona.






READ MORE:

http://rucool.marine.rutgers.edu/atlantic/index.html

http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/Robot_completes_first_underwater_crossing_of_Atlantic_Ocean_999.html