Autonomous Surface Craft Sails Coastal Waters

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An oceanographer at the University of Rhode Island’s Graduate School of Oceanography has begun testing a 36-foot custom-built robotic catamaran he helped design for collecting data about currents and circulation patterns in coastal waters. Built by SeaRobotics Corp. in Florida, it is the first vessel of its kind intended to operate independently in open coastal waters for up to a month at a time.

Dan Codiga, a URI marine research scientist, is conducting a series of field trials to demonstrate the boat’s high-tech capabilities this summer before deploying it on its first data collection mission later this year.

The new robotic boat has an efficient hybrid diesel-electric propulsion system and an onboard navigation system that can follow a pre-programmed course. Its large size helps maintain stability in sea states typical of Rhode Island Sound and Block Island Sound. It will be operated under close coordination with the Coast Guard, moving back and forth along a pre-designated transect like a moving buoy. It is being modified with software smart enough to change course to safely avoid other vessels it encounters.

The boat is equipped to measure currents but it can also host a wide variety of sensors used to study biological, chemical, sedimentary, and meteorological processes.

“Some of the most important questions about how coastal ecosystems work involve trying to understand the transport of material,” Codiga said. “For instance, how fast is salty water transported from outside of Narragansett Bay to within the Bay? What are the pathways by which harmful algal blooms are moved from the Gulf of Maine to the Southern New England continental shelf? Any time you get into the question of materials transport, you have to measure both currents and whatever the material is and capture spatial patterns repeatedly in time. That’s what has motivated design of this new platform.”

The URI researcher tested the new vessel for the first time in Allen Harbor in North Kingstown last week. He expects to continue testing its various capabilities in July and August.

The vessel was acquired with funding from the National Science Foundation’s Division of Ocean Technology and Interdisciplinary Coordination.

For more information, see the related press release.

Photo: Jim Fontaine, Exeter Science Services.