News

New funded support for SMEs with Earth Observation technologies, deadline for registration 5th November 2020

Space2Waves, a new European Funded project, has launched a Call of Interest to support SMEs with ear...

Funding available for SMEs working on technologies for small flying objects in the Blue Growth Sector

UFO (Emerging IndUstries new value chains boosted by small Flying Objects) is a new European Project...

Events

UFO Brainstorming and Cross-fertilisation session on Blue Growth, 7th December, online 8.00am - 11.00am

The European project UFO aims at fostering the development of cross-sectoral industrial value chains...

Virtual UK Trade and Export Finance Forum 2020, 7th-8th December 2020, 10.00-16.30 online

UK Trade and Investment are hosting this event which will bring together more than 600 leaders in bu...

More sophisticated autonomous ocean sampling techniques key aim for new project

The oceans are under researched both in time and in space. Tackling the lack of research with large fleets of research ships would be extremely expensive in terms of capital and operational expenditure.

Sensors on small numbers of orbiting satellites give a good global picture of the surface of the oceans but they are limited in resolution and do not give sub-surface data; they are also very expensive. Over the last decade there have been an increasing number of profiling floats and surface drifting floats but both only move with the current and give large scale global measurements. For detailed observations we need control over where, as well as what we measure and to have higher sampling frequency in both time and space.

Underwater and surface autonomous vehicles provide a possible solution. Present-day Marine Autonomous Systems (MAS) need to be pre-programmed with trajectories by humans which can often be restrictive. The SOFA project, Sampling Ocean Features Autonomously, will focus on developing new more sophisticated techniques of autonomous ocean sampling networks which do not rely on human pre-programming. These could be of scientific interest and commercial relevance to:

* Cetacean tracking
* Following a tidal mixing front
* Identifying the source of a single point leak such as a surface oil spill
* Tracking fish implanted with acoustic tags
* Seabed mapping

At the core of the SOFA project is a system that will remove the human operator and allow the vehicle to use the data being collected to direct it towards a pre-planned goal. A further outcome of the project will be to define and develop a commercialisation strategy to maximise the commercial impact and use of the intellectual property created. Specific areas which could potentially benefit from the outcomes of the SOFA project include:

* Seabed surveying for the oil, gas and renewable energy sectors
* Pipeline and cable tracking for the energy sector
* Scour and other geotechnical monitoring
* Environmental monitoring including fish and cetacean tracking
* Tidal mixing and ocean front tracking
* Ecosystem management
* Algae bloom detection
* Oil and other chemical spill detection and tracking
* Dredging and subsea mining operations

The SOFA project is part of the NERC/Innovate UK/Dstl Adaptive Ocean Sampling Network, Small Business Research Initiative (SBRI) programme. The partners of the project include the University of Exeter, who are project lead, Marine South East and the Meteorological Office.



Posted 2015-11-18 13:53:10

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