Month: September 2023

Week 2 R/V Neil Armstrong: Crazy Space Weather

08/31/23 – 09/07/23

Prince Christian Sound

I’ve gotten in the groove of things on the ship. The OOI crew deployed the large SUMO-10 buoy along with the whole mooring system. We had a low-pressure system move in so we had to hide out in Prince Christian Sound, Greenland which was STUNNING. We hung out at the entrance of the fjord for a while before going on a glacier hunt and sailing farther into the channel. The blue streaks on the icebergs were amazing to see as they floated by. My favorite glacier was one that stopped at a cliff and had a waterfall coming over the side.

Iceberg with blue streaks cutting through, one of the glaciers we saw, view from the bridge.

As if seeing glaciers wasn’t enough, we also saw the northern lights!! On the first night, I saw what I thought was a faint cloud but it turned out to be the aurora borealis. The sky contained green clouds that night. Then the second night, which was when an incoming solar flare was predicted to happen, we saw a faint light behind the mountains that looked like light pollution you’d see on the horizon. But then the light magnified and streaks shone across the sky, wiggling like green snakes. The crew stood out on the bow and in the bridge watching the lights in the sky. The coolest part was looking straight up and seeing the streaks of light directly above you like there was an alien spaceship trying to pick you up. The lights danced across the sky, and at one point I saw streaks of red mixing in with the green as they were painted across the sky. It was a magical night. 

Aurora lights in the sky. My camera picked up more of the green light than we saw in person.

Besides geeking out over glaciers and the northern lights, I 3D printed covers for the Debubblers in the lab to block the light and reduce bacterial overgrowth in between their cleaning maintenance. I also cleaned out the PC02 filter which was full of krill, cleaned the transmissometers, cleaned the forward pump with Emily which was full of mussels and barnacles (yum), practiced Linux with MIT’s text-based adventure game Terminus, prepared the CTD for deployment as the resident “bottle fairy” and practiced radio commands to the winch operator, practiced more Linux with OverTheWire’s Bandit Wargame, refilled the deionized water containers with Milli-Q water, learned from one of the WHOI scientists about the Winkler titration method to look at dissolved oxygen in the water samples from the CTD, and continued working with the 3D printer to create feet to secure the new Cricut craft printer.

Question of the Week: What are the northern lights, and why do they form?

The northern lights, also called the aurora borealis, are an atmospheric phenomenon of dancing lights. Galileo coined the term aurora borealis after Aurora, the Roman Goddess of Dawn, and Boreas, the Greek god of the north wind. In the south pole, the same atmospheric effect is referred to as aurora australis, named after the Greek god of the south wind. Auroras form due to an interaction between energized particles from the sun and Earth’s magnetic field. The Earth has a magnetic field based on the way its molten, iron core circulates that redirects incoming solar particles. Energized particles from the sun hit Earth’s upper atmosphere and are deflected by this magnetic field towards the north and south poles, which then excite molecules in the atmosphere to produce a dizzying array of colors. There was green and red in the aurora I saw since the solar particles excited oxygen and nitrogen molecules, creating green and red colors respectively.

Fun fact: auroras happen on other planets too! These planets also have magnetic fields and atmospheres.

Source:

https://www.space.com/15139-northern-lights-auroras-earth-facts-sdcmp.html#section-northern-lights-faqs-answered-by-an-expert

9th week with JASON/WHOI

Monday August 28th – Sunday September 3rd

Started off this week with multiple dives on the midnight to noon shift. My team continued to swap out junction boxes, BEPs, and cameras. I was excited on Monday to take the port vertical thruster apart to replace the seals, clean, and reassemble it. During the previous dive, I noticed that the thruster comp had dropped slightly, so I knew there was a slight leak somewhere. Once JASON was on deck, I was able to identify the leak coming from the port vertical thruster.

On Monday, August 29th, I sat copilot until 6am, and then was able to finish off the dive flying JASON for an hour while transiting to an undervator location. I was able to practice flying laterally around objects on the seafloor, landing JASON without kicking up sediment, and maintaining appropriate altitudes so science could complete visual inspection of the area being covered. Once this dive ended and we recovered JASON, we finished our post-dive checks and began our transit back to port.

Unfortunately, over the last few days, multiple covid cases were verified on board so when we reached port, the JASON crew was sent to a local hotel to help minimize the potential exposure. We spent 2 nights there and enjoyed a much-needed rest. By Thursday morning, we were back in action prepping the vehicle for the 3rd leg of the Kelley Cruises by draining the junction boxes, wiring in, and testing the science cables, and then filling the j-boxes and bleeding out the air bubbles. We were originally scheduled to leave port this afternoon, but due to weather concerns, our transit was delayed until the afternoon on Friday, September 1st.

For this leg, we started out near the Axial Seamount, which meant around a 24 hour transit, so Saturday was spent transiting and completing notes/logging/data management tasks. When we first arrives onsite, the weather was not adequate enough to safely launch JASON, so my shift completed predive checks and set up the basket so when the weather calmed down, we could go right in the water. Luckily, by 9am, the weather subsided, and we began launching JASON at 11, but while the rov was hovering over the water, about to be lowered down, the winch’s emergency stop alarm was raised, so we immediately returned and secured JASON onto the deck. The vehicle was in good condition, but the next shift who relieved us after this incident would have to work on identifying and fixing the winch issue.

Tip of the week: “Covid caution is still appreciated.”

We have been lucky the first 7 weeks to have no covid issues on board during previous cruises. The covid protocols were no longer in effect as of the spring, but caution is appreciated for these kinds of jobs, especially working so closely with others for extended periods of time. Even though people have relaxed a bit surrounding covid, it can quickly end a cruise when not taken seriously. Before coming out on the Thompson, I minimized my exposure for 2 weeks and made sure to test a week before leaving, 3 days before traveling, and the morning I boarded the ship to keep my possible exposure at a minimum. When at sea, if someone becomes ill or is injured in any way, there is minimal medical assistance out here, and depending on where you are located, can take days to get back to port for emergencies.

In this situation with positive covid cases, it was nice to see that people responded appropriately, and worked together (or technically, separately) to stop the spread so we could continue with our work.

Week 2 – Haley Holcomb

 

The first of Sentry’s dives was one of two “engineering dives” meant to ensure that all of our instruments were behaving as expected before any scientific data was collected. Before this first dive, I put the remaining skins on the vehicle and dummy cables on its chargers before I watched as the team took it out of its cradle and a crane lowered it into the water. I really hoped to see a whale on this trip and actually got to see one right before this first dive, setting a good precedent for our operations. I reassembled the cradle as Sentry descended and then took my first shift on watch. We have to take note of things like the vehicle’s position, velocity, heading, and battery percentage every fifteen minutes, as well as the time of any abnormal behavior or commands we send to it to be referred to when looking back at the data. When I was relieved from watch, I got to take my first break until Sentry began its ascent. One of the members of the crew was responsible for connecting the forward tagline as the crane pulled the vehicle up from the surface and I got to be involved in the recovery by grabbing the pole from them once this line was secure. During the post-dive maintenance, I comped and bled the servos, junction boxes, and thrusters and replaced one of the burn wires, which are a last-resort method of dropping Sentry’s weights to bring it back up to the surface.  

 

I helped conduct each element of the deck test before the second engineering dive, which is a test of Sentry’s various components before its mission. I had taken part in this in the previous dive but felt like I was finally able to get a good understanding of everything that was going on. We transmit a specific frequency to each of the two acoustic releases and listen for a chime to indicate that it was received. The drop motors must be visually inspected to ensure that they are free from any wires so that weights can be released without obstruction, and must hold in place when commanded to do so. The servos in the wings can be controlled either by a remote control called a “joybox” or by commands from inside. The joybox is used to back the vehicle up to the side of the boat as it is being recovered so that it can be secured by the taglines and crane. Using each method of control, we command the wings to assume various positions and watch to make sure that they respond to this sequence without exceeding each orientation and that the propellers are spinning in the correct directions. Lastly, we measure the voltage on the burn wires and load the weights. I get so excited when I see marine life and we saw a sunfish while we were conducting these tests! Before each dive, we also go through a pre-dive routine, which involves enabling the iridiums and strobes, unplugging the charging cables, connecting the hoses for the cooling system, putting the vehicle’s skins on, and removing the straps that secure it to its cradle. After we launched, I had my first solo watch shift. Upon recovery, when the vehicle was secured in its cradle, we carried out the post-dive tasks. We return it to shore power, switch it over to ethernet, reconnect the cooling lines to the hoses on the ship, and power off the strobes.

 

On the day of the first science dive, I got to sleep in for the first time and it felt so nice to be well-rested. I felt like I had begun to fall into a routine with the pre and post-dive so I could be more helpful and perform tasks without instruction. We added a few extra sensors for the scientists and compensated for this change in weight before performing the deck test. Usually, Sentry is used for seafloor mapping, but on this trip, we are collecting various data over hydrothermal vents. It is designed to stay a certain altitude above the seafloor, but for this objective, we wanted to command it to hold a certain depth below the surface instead. Because of this, there were many points where Sentry’s acoustics could not reach the seafloor, and we lost what they call “bottom lock”. The software in the vehicle would then lose its trackline and begin to ascend, so the person on watch had to send a series of commands from the surface to combat this.

The science dives are 24 hours long, so every day we will alternate between having missions from noon to noon and from midnight to midnight. When we launch at noon, my watch shift is from 8am to noon, and when we launch at midnight, my shift will be from 8pm to midnight, so I am always working during Sentry’s ascent. My first watch shift was much more involved than is typical, as was expected due to the constant loss of bottom lock. The team had come up with a solution where we could push the vehicle back towards its trackline with a series of shift commands to keep it inside an envelope of altitude and depth. I lost bottom lock a few times on my shift, but was able to follow this sequence and keep everything under control. At the very end of my watch, the commands to keep depth stopped working, so I was instructed to abort the mission early and went outside to help with recovery. When the vehicle was secure, I came back inside and asked the software engineer if I could watch his post-dive tasks such as securing power and communications and recovering all of the collected data. I was really interested in these “inside operations” and asked to continue to shadow him when I was not needed outside. Once all of the data was downloading, he told me it would be a bit of a long wait, so I went down to the gym for the first time. It was really nice to relieve some stress but, while it does add an element of fun, running on a treadmill while the boat is rolling was very disorienting. I did some yoga as well, but keeping my balance was even harder. When I returned, I helped test a pump for a methane sensor that a scientist wanted to add to the vehicle for the following dive. It wasn’t working on our vehicle power, but she was able to connect it to another one of their instruments and get enough power that way and we deployed again at midnight.  

 

When the vehicle is in the water, the days are more relaxed. I had been given a project that would allow us to better predict when the weather would be too severe to launch by monitoring the disparities between different forecasts and the actual conditions, so I began to think about how I wanted to execute that. This became more intriguing as we awaited an approaching storm. While I was working, I got a message that someone had seen dolphins outside and ran out in the rain to watch them. There were about seven of them playing right up next to the boat and it was a kind I had never seen before. They were so tiny and cute. I came down to the lab for my 8pm watch shift, but things were really hectic as Sentry was failing to follow its desired path. I watched for a while as this was troubleshot, but they were not confident that their commands were successful, so they aborted early and I eventually took over to monitor the ascent. The weather had started to worsen and the science team still needed to launch a CTD, so this ended up being a good decision all around. Because I was already on watch, I got to carry out the inside operations for recovery and really enjoyed being more involved in the software side of things again. This time, I stuck around as the data came in and it was actually really cool because I got to briefly see each Matlab plot pop up before the successive one did, giving me a much better idea of what the science party is using Sentry to measure.

 

The next morning, we cleaned up the deck in anticipation of the incoming storm. I decided to do my calculations of the offset between weather reports on Matlab and began to input my data and write that script until the waves began to increase in height and I started to feel seasick. I got off my computer and joined the people working outside, who were preparing for the installation of a water sampler called SUPR. We began some tests, but there appeared to be a ground issue so the scientists took SUPR back inside and we started to set up its tubing. Being outside was not helping much, so I went down to take a nap and woke up feeling a lot better. Because the weather didn’t allow us to launch that day, a few people gathered in the lounge for a movie night.

The wind is continuing to pick up, so we refrained from launching once again today. I started my day by inputting some new data into my weather script and then did my laundry. I returned to the lab to see if I could help anyone, but because SUPR was still being fixed and the weather was so poor, there was no work to be done. I went down to the gym and rejoined everyone for dinner. Tomorrow will most likely be a lot like today, but we hope to launch again when the weather subsides on Sunday.

 

 

Week 2: Atlantic Explorer

Just as my first cruise on the Atlantic Explorer came to an end, week two of my internship began. The approaching hurricanes were, from this point on, a constant logistical concern. The first hurricane, Franklin, hit a couple days ago. It wasn’t particularly intense, but it was still windy enough that there was not much for us or our visiting scientists to do but stay on the ship. The second hurricane, Idalia, is sitting on top of Bermuda as I type this. Other than getting in the way of weekend plans, the storm has not been particularly unpleasant. The power is out on the BIOS campus, but I’m lucky enough to be on the ship’s generator power.

 

Idalia’s position right now

 

This week was quite busy. I started on a personal project, which has, unfortunately, been very uncooperative with me. I’ll write about it once I make some actual progress. For now, let’s focus on the enjoyable parts of this internship.

 

We’ve been doing several odd jobs around the ship now that it’s in port. We moved a temperature sensor onto the main mast, cleaned parts of the ship’s water intake system, and replaced the batteries in a pinger that we may soon attach to the CTD. BIOS has a new liquid nitrogen generator, and I got the chance to fill a dewar, pictured below, with liquid nitrogen, which we will use on a future cruise. 

 

Me filling a dewar

 

Additionally, I was given a tour of The Mid-Atlantic Glider Initiative and Collaboration (MAGIC) vehicle, and the process by which its buoyancy is adjusted so that it can fly through the ocean effectively. It is lowered into a tank of seawater and weighed by two scales, which allow scientists to compare the weight at the front and back of the vehicle and fine tune it by adding or removing weighted material from the inside of the glider.

 

One of MAGIC’s gliders

 

Lastly, today I had the chance to do something totally unrelated to work. My mentor and I used some of the liquid nitrogen from the generator to make ice cream. We mixed up a basic recipe, mostly made of half-and-half we took (with permission) from the galley. It came out pretty close to Dippin’ Dots, and we mixed up the following flavors:

Vanilla

Peanut butter chocolate

Coffee

Kiwi strawberry

Maple nut

Grape

Give it 5 or 10 years, and grape ice cream will be all the rage. It’ll be a Bermudan specialty. We hope to give this ice-cream making process another go, and I’ll write about all the fun flavors we make in a future blog post!

 

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