Maiden Voyage of the Under-Ice Float
Abstract
The Under-Ice Float (UIF) is a new autonomous platform for sea ice and upper ocean observations in the marginal ice zone (MIZ). UIF is based on the Mixed Layer Lagrangian Float design, inheriting its accurate buoyancy control and relatively heavy payload capability. A major challenge for sustained autonomous observations in the MIZ is detection of open water for navigation and telemetry surfacings. UIF employs the new surface classification algorithm based on the spectral analysis of surface roughness sensed by an upward-looking sonar. A prototype UIF was deployed in the MIZ of the central Arctic Ocean in late August 2015. The main payload of the first UIF was a bio-optical suit consisting of upward- and downward hyperspectral radiometers; temperature, salinity, chlorophyll, turbidity, and dissolved oxygen sensors, and a high-definition photo camera. In the early stages of its mission, the float successfully avoided ice, detected leads, surfaced in open water, and transmitted data and photographs. We will present the analysis of these observations from the full UIF mission extending into the freeze-up season.
- Publication:
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American Geophysical Union, Ocean Sciences Meeting
- Pub Date:
- February 2016
- Bibcode:
- 2016AGUOSHE24A1425S
- Keywords:
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- 9310 Antarctica;
- GEOGRAPHIC LOCATIONDE: 9315 Arctic region;
- GEOGRAPHIC LOCATIONDE: 4540 Ice mechanics and air/sea/ice exchange processes;
- OCEANOGRAPHY: PHYSICALDE: 4572 Upper ocean and mixed layer processes;
- OCEANOGRAPHY: PHYSICAL