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New Hybrid Deep-sea Vehicle Is Christened NereusUnique underwater vehicle is named in nationwide student contest |
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| Source: Oceanus Magazine
Nereus—a mythical god with
a fish tail and a man’s torso—was chosen Sunday (June 25) in a
nationwide contest as the name of a first-of-its-kind, deep-sea vehicle
under construction at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.
The
vehicle, known until now as the Hybrid Remotely Operated Vehicle, or
HROV, will be able to work in the deepest parts of the ocean, from
6,500 meters to 11,000 meters (21,500 feet to 36,000 feet), a depth
currently unreachable for routine ocean research. Scientists also plan
to use it to explore remote, difficult-to-reach areas, including under
the Arctic ice cap.
[Editor's note: On May 31, 2009, Nereus dove to the deepest part of the ocean—Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench. Read the article and interviews with engineers who built Nereus.]
Engineers and ship's crew will be able to transform Nereus
from a free-swimming vehicle for wide-area ocean surveys to a vehicle
tethered by a cable to a surface ship that can be used for or close-up
investigation and sampling of seafloor rocks and organisms. The
transformation will take 6 to 8 hours and happen on the ship's deck.
“Nereus best
fits the image of our vehicle, which engineers can change shape at sea
for various science needs,” said Andy Bowen, the WHOI engineer
overseeing the vehicle’s design and development.
Bowen was among a panel of judges from WHOI and engineering consulting groups that selected Nereus
from 22 entries in a naming contest open to junior high, high school,
and college students who participate in the California-based Marine
Advanced Technology Education (MATE) Center.
The program
provides students in the U.S. and Canada opportunity to explore
marine-related careers through internship programs, and it sponsors an
annual remotely operated vehicle design competition.
“The
students thought it would be appropriate to name it after a Greek
god who combined two forms,” said Kelly Miller, an oceanography
and chemistry teacher at Monterey High School in California who
coordinated the winning name submission for a team of six
sophomores, juniors, and seniors.
A vehicle that switches modes
Nereus
(rhymes with “serious”) keeps with a tradition in the WHOI Deep
Submergence Laboratory of naming vehicles for mythical Greek figures.
Among others in the WHOI-operated fleet of vehicles are Jason (a fabled adventurer and ocean explorer), Argo (a ship used by Jason), and Medea (the mythical wife of Jason).
Several
teams proposed names for the new vehicle taken from mythology,
including the Japanese dragon god Ryujin, the Greek god of wind Aiolos,
and the Greek god of the sea Poseidon. Ultimately, Bowen said Nereus
was selected because “the name most appropriately represented the
vehicle’s ability to switch modes as needed by scientists.”
The
$5-million, battery-operated vehicle will be the first ever designed to
transform from a guided, tethered robot to a free-swimming vehicle.
Each capability offers advantages to deep-sea researchers. In its
autonomous mode, the vehicle will be able to fly on pre-programmed
missions over swaths of ocean bottom to map the seafloor, to gather
remote data, or to search for scientific targets such as hydrothermal
vents.
In its tethered mode, it will remain connected via a
hair-thin, 25-mile long cable that will enable scientists on the
surface ship to send instant commands to the mechanical arm, used for
gathering samples of interesting undersea rocks and organisms.
Scheduled for launch in 2007
Sea
trials will take place offshore Woods Hole in early 2007, and
scientists will plan to use it for research later that year at
Challenger Deep, a trench in the Pacific Ocean southwest of Guam. It is
the deepest area of any ocean, deeper than Mount Everest is high,
extending almost 11,000 meters (36,000 feet) beneath the sea surface.
The
panel of judges involved in the name selection included engineers from
WHOI as well as engineering consultants working on the vehicle at The
Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and the Space and Naval Warfare
Systems Center in San Diego.
Several teams suggested names
inspired by wildlife, including the color-switching lizard Chameleon,
the aquatic salamander Siren, the Hawaiian owl Pueo, and the scientific
name for lobster, Homarus.
Others proposed people names. A
Newfoundland team suggested Jacques, after famed underwater explorer
Jacques Cousteau. Harvey, proposed by a Florida team, acknowledged
marine artist Guy Harvey. Audrey, the only female name, came from a
California team honoring the late Audrey Mestre, who died in 2002
attempting to set a deep-sea diving record.
Nereus
was announced the winner during a June 25 awards banquet at the NASA
Johnson Space Center in Houston. The prize for the winning team is a
trip this September to see the HROV in Woods Hole, where Bowen said
engineers expect to be concluding tests on the vehicle’s manipulator
arm, thruster, pressure housings, and electronic components.
—Amy E. Nevala
Funding for the development of Nereus comes
from the National Science Foundation, the Office of Naval Research, and
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
Originally published: June 26, 2006
Last updated: October 9, 2009 |