FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Media Relations Office
July 11, 2006
(508) 289-3340
Shelley Dawicki
The underwater research vehicle Jason Jr., which gained international attention for its exploration inside the wreck of the R.M.S. Titanic
in July 1986, and its engineering team from Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution (WHOI) will be honored July 14 with the 2006 GlobalSpec
Great Moments in Engineering award.
The honor comes on the 20th anniversary of the Institution’s second expedition to the wreck of Titanic, nine months after the initial discovery by an unmanned towed camera system named Argo.
At the time the Deep Submergence Laboratory (DSL) at WHOI, part of the
Applied Ocean Physics and Engineering Department, was developing the
dual vehicle Argo/Jason system for deep ocean exploration. Jason Jr. was a prototype meant to test design concepts for the planned and much larger remotely operated vehicle (ROV) Jason, which is controlled from the surface via a fiber-optic cable miles long.
“The DSL engineers have made significant advances in the development of
ROVs for ocean research, in the use of fiber optics and in underwater
imaging,” Acting WHOI President and Director James Luyten said.
“They proved in 1986 that small unmanned vehicles could be used in very
deep water, in tight spaces and amid wreckage too dangerous for humans
to explore in larger submersibles like Alvin.
They helped pave the way for the routine use of remotely operated
vehicles, and now autonomous underwater vehicles, for scientific,
military, and commercial needs.”
In 1983, the U.S. Navy’s Office of Naval Research (ONR), and later the
Office of Naval Technology (ONT), awarded DSL $2.8 million to build a
revolutionary exploration vehicle system called Argo/Jason. The first phase of that development effort was the building of the Argo
search system, a towed vehicle equipped with low-light level television
cameras and capable of working to depths of 20,000 feet. Argo was successfully tested in the summer of 1985 at the Titanic site, resulting in the luxury liner’s discovery.
Testing of the prototype Jason vehicle, a much smaller remotely operated or tethered vehicle named Jason Jr.,
and development of a fiber optic handling system for use in the deep
sea was a major challenge in 1986. Fiber optic cables, although common
today, were not in use in the deep sea and required significant
engineering advances. Unlike traditional coaxial cables with limited
bandwidth, fiber optic cables permit transmission of vast amounts of
color imagery, other data and power. No one had successfully operated
an ROV in very deep water, nor used a fiber optic cable system like
this in the deep sea.
The original Jason was retired after ten years of successful operation and replaced in 2002 with the current Jason,
capable of reaching depths to 6,500 meters (21,320 feet). That
vehicle, currently at sea in the western Pacific, is part of the U.S.
National Deep Submergence Facility operated by WHOI for the American
ocean research community.
The award, a trophy, will be presented to Christopher von Alt, Jason Jr. principal engineer, and other members of the 1985-1986 Jason Jr. engineering team at a breakfast ceremony at the New England Aquarium in Boston.
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About the Award
The GlobalSpec Great Moments in Engineering award is presented annually
to a person or group whose singular moment of engineering ingenuity
produced a significant turning point for the application of technology
and resulting benefits to people, science and industry. The 2005 award
was presented to NASA engineers from April 1970 responsible for saving
lives of crew members during the harrowing flight of Apollo 13.
GlobalSpec, Inc. is the leading specialized vertical search,
information services and e-publishing company serving the engineering,
technical and industrial communities, providing access to comprehensive
technical content on standards, patents, materials properties,
specifications, designs, application notes and more. Visit
GlobalSpec at www.globalspec.com.
Originally published: July 11, 2006