DEPTHX

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DEPTHX robot being lowered into La Pilita, one of several water-filled sinkholes in Sistema Zacaton (in northeastern Mexico). Photo by Marc Airhart, Jackson School of Geosciences, March 2007.
DEPTHX robot being lowered into La Pilita, one of several water-filled sinkholes in Sistema Zacaton (in northeastern Mexico). Photo by Marc Airhart, Jackson School of Geosciences, March 2007.

The Deep Phreatic Thermal Explorer (DEPTHX) is an autonomous underwater vehicle, designed to explore deep underwater caves. It is purported to be the most advanced robotic vehicle of its kind on Earth. Its primary function is observation, with an array of sonar sensors (for 3D mapping) all around its flattened spheroid hull. It is about seven feet in diameter, and designed to make its own decisions, rather than solely following instructions directly given from human observers.

DEPTHX was built in 2006 and used to conduct field experiments in Mexico from January to May 2007. It demonstrated several technologies for navigation, decision making and biological detection that might be used someday to explore Jupiter's moon Europa.

DEPTHX was the first robot to demonstrate three-dimensional SLAM technology, enabling it to map unexplored spaces by creating a 3D map on the fly as it travels and to know where it is within that map at all times. It successfully collected microbiological samples, which led to the discovery by scientists at the Colorado School of Mines of several new classes of microbes. Finally, DEPTHX successfully mapped the lower portion and bottom of the world's deepest water-filled sinkhole, Cenote Zacatón. Because of its great depth (over 1,000 feet), human divers had failed to reach (or even detect with sonar instruments) the bottom.

[edit] History

One of the driving forces behind the intensely collaborative DEPTHX mission—in many ways its instigator—was Marcus Gary, a doctoral candidate in hydrogeology at the Jackson School of Geosciences. For many years, Gary has studied Sistema Zacatón--a system of water-filled sinkholes in northeastern Mexico including the deepest, Cenote Zacatón. He's tried to understand how the sinkholes formed and how they evolve over time.

At a barbecue in Austin, Texas in about 2002, Gary asked Bill Stone, a world famous cave diver, engineer and alumnus of the Jackson School of Geosciences, if it would be possible to build a robot to explore the Mexican cave system. The data a robot could collect about the internal structures of the sinkholes and environmental parameters in the water, Gary reasoned, would help hydrogeologists understand how the sinkholes form and evolve over time.

For Stone, the project sounded like a great way to develop robotic technologies that might one day be useful in the search for life in space. NASA thought so too and funded the three-year, $5 million DEPTHX mission. For NASA, the long-term target is Jupiter’s ice-covered moon Europa, which appears to harbor a vast salt water ocean with the potential to support life. As a stepping stone toward such a mission, NASA is funding the ENDURANCE expeditions to Antarctica’s Lake Bonney in late 2008 and late 2009 using the technology from the DEPTHX robot.

DEPTHX was built during 2006 at Stone Aerospace in Austin, Texas. Preliminary dives took place at the Applied Research Laboratory at The University of Texas at Austin, and under outdoor conditions at the Quarries, a swimming hole owned by Austin’s Hyde Park Baptist Church.

One of the distinctive qualities of the 3,300-pound, computerized, underwater vehicle is that it makes its own decisions. With more than 100 sensors, 36 onboard computers, and 16 thrusters and actuators, DEPTHX decides where to swim, which samples to collect, and how to get home, based on maps that the probe draws during each dive.

By January 2007, team members from The University of Texas at Austin, Carnegie Mellon University, Southwest Research Institute, Colorado School of Mines, and Stone Aerospace were ready to head to Mexico to continue testing DEPTHX, the world’s only semi-autonomous cave diving robot.

Fieldwork Timeline:

  • January 25-27, 2007 - The DEPTHX Team begins surveying the world's deepest water-filled sinkhole, Zacatón in Mexico[1][2].
  • February 4-10, 2007 - Field operations at la Pilita, one of the sinkholes in Sistema Zacatón. DEPTHX runs long autonomous missions to map the area and collect scientific data[3][4].
  • March 2007 - Field work continues in La Pilita[5][6][7][8].
  • May 2007 - DEPTHX is lowered into Zacatón for the first time and maps the bottom for the first time. Three-dimensional SLAM technology is demonstrated, microbiological samples are collected, and autonomous operation demonstrated[9][10][11].

The last field experiments with the DEPTHX robot occurred in Mexico in May 2007. Some of its components will be salvaged for a follow-on project named ENDURANCE. That mission, which involves some of the original DEPTHX team, is designed to explore subglacial lakes in Antarctica in 2008 and 2009.

[edit] References

  1. ^ DEPTHX: Zacaton - Mission 1 (Stone Aerospace, Jan/Feb 2007)
  2. ^ DEPTHX Field Notes (Carnegie Mellon University, January 2007)
  3. ^ DEPTHX: Zacaton - Mission 1 (Stone Aerospace, Jan/Feb 2007)
  4. ^ DEPTHX Field Notes (Carnegie Mellon University, February 2007)
  5. ^ Dispatches from Zacatón (Marc Airhart, March 2007)
  6. ^ DEPTHX Mission 2 (Marcus Gary, March 2007)
  7. ^ DEPTHX: Zacaton - Mission 2 (Stone Aerospace, March 2007)
  8. ^ DEPTHX Field Notes (Carnegie Mellon University, March 2007)
  9. ^ DEPTHX: Zacaton - Mission 3 (Stone Aerospace, May 2007)
  10. ^ Dispatches from Zacatón (Marc Airhart, May 2007)
  11. ^ DEPTHX Field Notes (Carnegie Mellon University, May 2007)

[edit] External links

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