Research Vehicle Reaches the Bottom of the Ocean 165
timothy found BBC coverage of the voyage of the Nereus, which on May 31 dove to the bottom of the Challenger Deep in the Marianas Trench. Only two vehicles have accomplished this feat before, the last 11 years ago. "The unmanned vehicle is remotely operated by pilots aboard a surface ship via a lightweight tether. Its thin, fibre-optic tether to the research vessel Kilo Moana allows the submersible to make deep dives and be highly manoeuvrable. Nereus can also be switched into a free-swimming, autonomous vehicle. ... The Challenger Deep... is the deepest abyss on Earth at 11,000m-deep, more than 2km (1.2 miles) deeper than Mount Everest is high. At that depth, pressures reach 1,100 times those at the surface."
Are you ready kids? (Score:5, Funny)
Aye aye, Captain!
Re:Are you ready kids? (Score:5, Funny)
I can't hear you!
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AYE AYE, CAPTAIN!
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undersea progress (Score:2, Funny)
Re:undersea progress (Score:4, Funny)
You're asking a lot there, buddy. Don't you think they got enough pressure as it is?
Re:undersea progress (Score:4, Funny)
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Yea, Dethklok recording their new album and a giant radioactive seahorse.
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oh god i fell asleep on the couch last night and woke up to that..
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They've been there before, with a manned craft, back in the 60s. They used something called a bathyscaphe. They just found some flounder down there.
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Walked? How un-extreme. (Score:2)
How about some ocean bottom Extreme Ironing [extremeironing.com]?
Mal-2
I wonder if my great^8 grandkids (Score:2)
Re:I wonder if my great^8 grandkids (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm impressed with the two guys who did it *manned* in the 60s
from tfa :
In January 1960, Jacques Piccard and Don Walsh made the first and only manned voyage in a Swiss-built bathyscaphe known as the Trieste.
The vessel consisted of a 2m-diameter (6ft) steel sphere containing the crew suspended below a huge 15m-long (50ft) tank of petrol, designed to provide buoyancy.
During the nine-hour mission, the two men spent just 20 minutes on the ocean floor; enough time to measure the depth as 10,916m (35,813 ft).
Re:I wonder if my great^8 grandkids (Score:4, Funny)
Men had balls in the 60s.
Re:I wonder if my great^8 grandkids (Score:5, Funny)
Fixed that for you.
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Men had balls of steel in the 60s.
Fixed.
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Alas, these particular men had to leave those balls on the bottom of the trench in order to surface again:
Re:I wonder if my great^8 grandkids (Score:4, Interesting)
Depends - Quote [physorg.com]:"By mimicking a brick-and-mortar molecular structure found in seashells, University of Michigan researchers created a composite plastic that's as strong as steel but lighter and transparent."
CC.
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Is that the same NCIS building the goth chick, grey haired guy, ex-mossad agent, British medical examiner and two young blokes work at too?
Re:I wonder if my great^8 grandkids (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm impressed with the two guys who did it *manned* in the 60s
from tfa :
In January 1960, Jacques Piccard and Don Walsh made the first and only manned voyage in a Swiss-built bathyscaphe known as the Trieste.
The vessel consisted of a 2m-diameter (6ft) steel sphere containing the crew suspended below a huge 15m-long (50ft) tank of petrol, designed to provide buoyancy.
During the nine-hour mission, the two men spent just 20 minutes on the ocean floor; enough time to measure the depth as 10,916m (35,813 ft).
Yeah, I remember seeing a special on that when I was younger (like 10 years ago), and I still remember it, because it's such an awesome story. I really suggest that if anyone is bored you look this story up, it's really awesome.
The sad thing is that once they hit the bottom, the sand down there was so fine that it threw up a cloud of it that never cleared during the time that they were there, so they didn't get to see much except for what they saw right before they landed!
-Taylor
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Absolutely, the Trieste and the crew do seem to be more impressive than a robotic vessel in 2009. Trieste was engineering ingenuity and creativity, and the crew members, well, they had some balls!
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In January 1960, Jacques Piccard and Don Walsh made the first and only manned voyage [...].
He was boldly going where no one has gone before. I'm sure it will become a family tradition.
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Oh yeah? Well, I'm going to be the first man to set foot on the surface of the sun!
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After getting through the corona, that should feel downright refreshing.
Re:I wonder if my great^8 grandkids (Score:5, Funny)
That's why I'd do it at night.
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Will see a craft reach the surface of one of the gaseous giants.
Unlikely, seeing as the gas giant planets don't have surfaces.
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Yes, it does.
What part of "possible" don't you really understand?
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'Is it gas and liquid all the way done, lol.'
Don't be silly; it's turtles.
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Lol, are you serious?
Sure
What is at the centre of a gaseous planet then?
We DO NOT KNOW.
Is it gas and liquid all the way done, lol.
Maybe.
The pressure might be high enough to force the liquids into a solid, OR the extremely high pressures generate enough heat to maintain a liquid or rocky [nmm.ac.uk] core.
But we just don't know...
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Unlikely, seeing as the gas giant planets don't have surfaces.
The sun is a planet?
All I want to know.. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:All I want to know.. (Score:5, Funny)
Do they have a good pizza/wing place down there?
No, but there's a Starbuck's.
Only Two Vehicles (Score:1, Funny)
Plus all the boats that sank.
When will (Score:2, Interesting)
Cable? Why? (Score:5, Interesting)
Somebody smarter than myself, please comment on why we need a cable over a distance of 11km? There's a ton of off-the-shelf radio equipment that can easily handle that distance with very high bitrates.
I can imagine two possible problems:
First, the ocean might simply be good at blocking transmissions.
Second, the varying pressures and temperatures might distort a signal to the point where it is unusable. I'm referring to dielectric effects and the fact that the dielectric constant would not be constant in this sort of operation. But would it be "constant-enough"?
Re:Cable? Why? (Score:4, Informative)
Yes, it just might be. In fact, it is. You see, salt water is conductive.
Re:Cable? Why? (Score:5, Informative)
Yes salt water is very good at attenuating RF, the higher the frequency the worse it is. Have a look at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extremely_low_frequency [wikipedia.org] on Wikipedia that highlights some of the difficulties, especially in relation to antenna size. Also at those frequencies you can end up with transmission rates less than one bit per second.
Re:Cable? Why? (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Cable? Why? (Score:4, Informative)
First, the ocean might simply be good at blocking transmissions.
I don't have direct knowledge of the behavior of radio waves in water, but I would strongly guess this.
Even sunlight peters out at depths measured in dozens of feet, and that you need pretty strong lights to illuminate even 10 feet in front of you if you're at the bottom. Going through two miles of water would likely be quite a feat.
Further, I'm pretty sure that the reason water is "blue" is that blue light tends to penetrate better (think looking up from the perspective of a SCUBA diver 20 or 30 feet down), which suggests that longer wavelengths get blocked more, which is exactly the opposite of what you would want for radio penetration.
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This is mostly a nitpick, but water is blue because other frequencies of visible light get absorbed and turned into molecular vibrations (or something like that, I never fully understood that mechanic). This is an entirely separate phenomenon from what causes it to attenuate RF signals.
I only bring it up because blue, and even red, light are much higher frequencies than would be used in RF transmissions (10^14 Hz for visible light as opposed to 10^11 at the most for RF).
Re:Cable? Why? (Score:4, Informative)
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Because of the electrical conductivity of salt water, submarines are shielded from most electromagnetic communications.
Very low frequency signals can penetrate about 20 meters.
Extremely low frequency signals can be received from deeper but are extremely limited in bandwidth.. and you need to use the whole earth as an antenna, etc.
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Hence, the tether.
Underwater radio (Score:5, Informative)
There's active work going on [wirelessfibre.co.uk] with underwater radio. It's really tough to do in salt water. But it's not quite impossible. There's considerable interest in making something that can push data through 100 meters of water depth. Oil industry operations would like to talk to their stuff on the ocean floor.
At longer ranges, there's at least one research project [europa.eu] which claims that there's a transmission window in seawater between 1MHz and 10MHz. They hope to get data across 1KM. That will be useful if it works.
ELF works; the US and the USSR both have used it in the 70-85 Hz band. The trouble with ELF is that the wavelengths are so long at 80Hz that you need an antenna the size of a county.
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Since salt ware is conductive, couldn't you simply use electric discharge? Put a metal rod on the water and discharge an electric pulse through it; it'll expand in a spherical manner (or half-sphere if it ori
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Of course, the antenna length issue is less of a problem in the huge volume of ocean. A wire several thousand feet long strung behind a sub or rig isn't too hard as long as you stay away from twisty canyons, wrecks and sharks with lasers.x
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Re:Cable? Why? (Score:5, Informative)
... the ocean might simply be good at blocking transmissions.
The ocean isn't just good at blocking transmissions. It's ridiculously good at blocking radio waves. If you work the math on this [qsl.net] page, you can see that your basic WiFi transmission (at 2.4 GHz) will experience an attenuation of almost 1700 dB/meter! At that rate you'd get far less than a millimeter of penetration.
Even the lowest frequency short wave bands (1.8 MHz) get 46 dB/meter attenuation. It starts to get possible to receive RF when you get down in the kHz range but of course, your data rate goes to hell.
For underwater communications under a couple hundred meters or so you can use an acoustic modem. Even then, your best data rate is going to be on the order 2400 baud or less.
If you want high speed underwater communications, you gotta use a cable.
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Steve
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Blue light is a possibility, but not for more than a few hundreds of meters. High power isn't the answer in that case. Look at section 7.5 of Jackson's "Classical Electrodynamics" -- at least the 3rd edition. There is a very interesting window in the absorption coefficient of *fresh* water right in the visible region, which life has obviously taken advantage of. However, even for the LOWEST area of that coefficient (around 10^(-4) ) per centimeter still puts the range at which light loses 50% of its intensi
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Water blocks radio. If Radio worked don't you think they would have used it?
The only way to send radio under water is to use ELF extremely low frequency radio. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extremely_low_frequency [wikipedia.org]
As you can see the data rate is in bits per minute...
Nice, but what does it do? (Score:3, Insightful)
It may give us access to 100% of the sea floor, but given the expense of sea exploration, how much will we actually explore? Setting records is nice and all, but it takes time, effort, and money to map the deep sea floor in any kind of detail.
It should be able to take samples and such, but what about repeat dives? The artile was a bit lacking, but hopefully google will turn up the juicy details on this particular little bot....
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I would love to see Google Street View of the ocean floor. Who knows what we'll find down there... And it's easy for Google too; no complaints about privacy breach.
Re:Nice, but what does it do? (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:Nice, but what does it do? (Score:5, Funny)
They are getting sued by SCO though, for violating their patent for sinking to the lowest depths possible.
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I don't often LOL because of a post, but you made it happen! Man, how did you come up with that?
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It is best to explore and deliberately push the boundaries of these craft. You never know when they might be required urgently for something like the Air France Flight 447 black box search, and it is best to break them when there is time to fix them, rather than when they just have to work.
Mal-2
how hard can it be? (Score:1)
Not to belittle the achievement, but how hard can it be to make something that won't crumple? Does every bit of equipment need to be at 1 atmosphere for it to function? Are there no solid-state components?
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It's pretty certain that the components are not functionning at 1 atmosphere of pressure. Give or take, the rule of thumb when diving is that the pressure goes up by 1 atmosphere for every 10m of depth. With a depth of 11000m, that's 1100 atmospheres of pressure. That's one of the most reliable methods they use to measure depth, actually.
It's not the outside pressure that causes things to crumple. It's the difference between outside and inside pressures. With that in mind, and keeping in mind that electroni
Re:how hard can it be? (Score:5, Interesting)
Uhh. those solid state components you're thinking of tend to have voids in them, e.g. what's under that lid on the CPU.. a bare die and a bunch o' bond wires. Squish city at 1000 Atm.
What about wires? More than enough pressure to push water through the wire using the insulation as a tube.
It is REALLY, REALLY hard to design stuff to work at 1000Atm. What do you use for bouyancy? (Trieste used gasoline.. a liquid that is about the same compressibility as water) Syntactic foam with silica microspheres is fairly popular, because the tiny hollow spheres are pretty strong.
Interestingly, it's harder to design something that won't crush than something that won't explode. That is, building a compressed gas tank to hold 20,000 psi is easier than building one that won't crush under 20,000 psi.
Re:how hard can it be? (Score:5, Interesting)
You seem to know a bit about submarines so perhaps you could answer a question that has puzzled me. If you build a submarine like an onion with a hull inside a hull and put pressurized water / air between the two hulls to half the outside pressure would each hull then only need to be strong enough to resist half the external pressure?
I can't see the flaw but it feels wrong because it seems to imply that it would be at least theoretically possible to build a submarine out of sheets of tin-foil as long as there were enough layers and the pressure could be maintained accurately enough.
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You are right. Your idea should work. However, designers until now have always chosen to have a single hull (which also consists of multiple layers, beams and parts that altogether withstand the pressure).
I am not sure that tin foil is your ideal material, because it should at least be able to keep itself up in a tubular shape, and tin foil isn't able to do that when the tube is the size of a submarine. (In other words: tin foil doesn't need water or a pressure difference across a hull to collapse... it doe
Re:how hard can it be? (Score:4, Informative)
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You're assuming really flexible hulls.
Would it make any difference to a normal sub if you had a steel chamber containing a vacuum inside the crew area? Or to the vaccum chamber?
Nope. The sub still has the same pressure inside, so the vaccuum chamber still has the same pressure on the outside. Neither sees any difference.
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I said a steel chamber containing a vacuum is placed inside the sub.
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My point is that that inner container has one less atm of pressure relative to the water outside than the inside of the sub itself, but neither sees any difference.
It's proof that layering different pressures inside each other doesn't require the inner container to be able to withstand the total pressure difference.
Your example with the plywood sheets fails because each is supported by the one below, so the weight transfers through. In other words, they can move up and down as much as necessary to let the w
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Here's a replacement example for you:
Two people are holding a metal sheet, one each side, and doing so they can hold 200kg placed on top off of the ground.
The 200kg weight represents pressure, the sheet represents the submarine's hull, and the people represent the hull's ability to withstand pressure. There is a melon on the floor below, representing a melon in the sub.
Hull failing from too much pressure == people dropping everything from too much weight. Either way the melon gets squished.
Now, adding anoth
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I'll make it simple:
Submarine, in water of 1001 atm pressure.
Pressure in sub is 1atm (for people).
This makes a difference between the inside and outside of 1000 atm. The sub can't withstand any more.
Sub has a box in. The box is welded to a table in the sub. The table is welded to the floor.
Box has 0atm pressure (vacuum) inside.
The box can only withstand about 2 atm pressure difference between its inside and outside at max.
But this is ok, the box is in the sub, and the sub has 1 atm pressure in.
The box's wal
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Thank you I now see the error in my thinking which I was fair certain must be there since it results in an absurd situation when taken to the limit. It's an interesting reason ing puzzle though.
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They all must withstand the pressure from a layer of ocean above them AND a layer of atmosphere above the ocean--the ocean doesn't protect against the atmospheric pressure.
Come again?
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"That is, building a compressed gas tank to hold 20,000 psi is easier than building one that won't crush under 20,000 psi."
That is because an air tank is loaded in tension and not in compression. Most material is stronger in tension than compression. Cement is one of the few that isn't. If fact the trick of build light strong anything is usually figuring out how to put convert the loads to tension.
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Just use vegetable oil for buoyancy. Actually I have no idea if it has the same compressibility as water or if it is light enough. If I remember correctly the Trieste used aviation gasoline. You could never do that today because it is such nasty stuff. Some subs even used mercury for trim since they could pump it back and forth to change the pitch of the sub.
Building any type of sub is just hard. Trying to figure out how to build any type of hull penetrations for a sub like that makes my head hurt.
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Isn't it an option to remove the difference between outside and inside?
Is it so hard to build electronic components that:
- Are individually insulated from the surrounding water.
- Have no internal compressible parts.
You'd then be able to let the water in. No pressure difference, no crunchy toy.
So then they were the first customers (Score:2)
But check out what it brought back! (Score:2)
"They said it was hauled from the Challenger Deep, but I'm positive that beast never swam in terrestrial waters until a week ago."
Twists in the fiber optic cable (Score:5, Insightful)
I worked on an ROV simulation back in the 90's and we needed to keep track of how many times the ROV turned around because twists accumulate in the cable. At some point you may have to sit in place and spin for a bit to undo the twists. Terrible things happen when the tether gets too twisted.
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I worked on an ROV simulation back in the 90's and we needed to keep track of how many times the ROV turned around because twists accumulate in the cable. At some point you may have to sit in place and spin for a bit to undo the twists. Terrible things happen when the tether gets too twisted.
Why aren't you doing the un-spinning at the top of the cable? Seems like it would be better than spinning around at the bottom.
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My uneducated guess is that the cable is so long that you'd wind up with (for example) a CW twist near the top of the cable and a CCW twist near the bottom of the cable - twists at the top wouldn't propagate all the way down.
I would love to set up point beacons (Score:2)
You know it is interesting that we have sent a sub down there, but it would have been cool to also send down tech that could record any sealife down there on webcam...and place beacons per each say 1000ft to be able to keep sending commands down to each camera to be able to control their movement...pan right up down...etc... We were able to send 2 rovers to the moon, could we not just do something to leave behind to record, so we don't have to keep going down there every 11 years...
Already been done? (Score:4, Funny)
Big deal, I've been to the bottom of the ocean (Score:2)
Granted, it wasn't he really deep parts.
Pineapple (Score:2)
In related news, researchers have also discovered who actually lives in a pineapple under the sea.
News at 11.
Whoosh. (Score:2)
So, did they see the plug?
Re:What They Aren't Telling Us... (Score:5, Funny)
That'll make for one traumatic moment when the lead mermaid tries to surface and bursts open from the tremendous drop in pressure. I don't think my kids would want to see that one.
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They are saying that the deepest part of the trench is 1.2 miles farther from sea level than the tip of Mt Everest. Your math confirms this.
Not sure what the problem is, other than the fact that they used m and km in the same sentence (which is the nice thing about metric units... you can easily interpret between m and km, unlike feet and miles).
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News reporters seldom seem to actually fully understand reality or what they are reporting
The "Deep Flight Challenger" vehicle has not actually *made* a dive to the bottom of Challenger Deep yet. In fact, its never made *any* deep dive, due to its owner's untimely death before its final completion.
Why would you expect news reporters to mention it? Claiming something is not newsworthy, *doing* that something is.