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| Helicopter Technician Rob Locke moves the helicopter out onto the
helicopter deck.
Photo by Rick Krishfield, WHOI. |
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| Pilot Chris Swannell in the driver’s seat of the helicopter prior
to takeoff. Note that the pilot sits on the right side of the aircraft.
Photo by Rick Krishfield, WHOI. |
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| The marginal ice conditions in the vicinity of the planned buoy
deployment as viewed from the ice reconnaissance flight (compare with photo
of ice in Dispatch 23). On the bright side, poor ice for the buoy
deployment, means that the Louis can cruise rapidly through this region. Photo by Rick Krishfield, WHOI. |
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Cruise - 2006 Dispatches
Calendar
Dispatch 25, August 29, 2006
By Rick Krishfield, WHOI
Ice Recon
During the past couple of days, the Louis has made tremendous
progress northward, steaming generally 10-12 knots through the mostly 1 m
(3-4 ft) thick first year ice. As a result, today we find ourselves rapidly
approaching the first planned Ice-Tethered Profiler (ITP) buoy
deployment which was earmarked for 76.5 °N. ITPs buoys are installed on
drifting icefloes and transmit seawater temperature and salinity data via
satellite telephone from a profiling CTD mounted on an 800 m (over 2500 ft)
wire suspended from the surface package through the ice. Due to the
logistic costs associated with trying to recover drifters in the Arctic ice
pack, the ITPs will not necessarily be recovered. Hence, it is desirable to
find robust ice floes to install the buoys on, in order to maximize the
lifetime of the systems (which can collect data for up to 3 years). Hoping
to find a 3-4 m (10-13 ft) multiyear floe for the first ITP deployment, this
morning we made a reconnaissance of the ice pack in the vicinity of our
planned site using the ship’s helicopter.
There are a lot of safety regulations that must be followed when
flying on helicopters, especially over water or in the Arctic. There are
strict rules governing the amount of visibility necessary to fly. There are
numerous safety devices that need to be carried on board the helicopter in
case of any emergency. Everyone on a flight wears a life preserver, and has
adequate clothing to keep warm in case the aircraft is grounded for a time.
Furthermore, there are inflatable floats attached to the landing gear that
automatically inflate if the helicopter were to land in water. Plus there
are many so many others that it would be impossible to describe them all
here.
There are also a number of safety precautions that need to be
followed when operating near a helicopter. First of all, one needs to keep
one’s head down when approaching or leaving the helicopter, so that an
errant blade rotation does not make contact. This also means that you never
should approach a helicopter going downhill, or leave a helicopter going
uphill (but this is not normally a concern in the relative flatness of the
Arctic ice). Furthermore, it is always stressed that one should NEVER walk
behind the aircraft, because the tail rotor is not clearly visible when it
is spinning. Now this may sound like a lot of rules, but with an
experienced pilot like we have on the Louis, Chris Swannell, flying is safer than driving through rush hour in your hometown.
As to our ice recon, we were sorely disappointed to find no
multiyear icefloes anywhere around, so had to defer our buoy deployment to
another day.
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