Above Board Winter Edition 2015

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AMC IS A SPECIALIST INSTITUTE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF TASMANIA

Ready to respond

Green power

Specialised training course simulates what it’s like to be out to sea in the case of a maritime emergency

A research project discovers ways for prawn trawlers to work more efficiently and be environmentally friendly

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#8

WINTER 2015

amc.edu.au

A BI-ANNUAL PUBLICATION OF THE AUSTRALIAN MARITIME COLLEGE

Chilling out: Dr Vanessa Lucieer (IMAS), Dr Remo Cossu (AMC) and Dr Alex Forrest (AMC) on a recent research trip to Antarctica.

ANTARCTIC DREAM

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he Australian Maritime College is harnessing its autonomous underwater vehicle expertise to establish a marine technology hub as part of a threeyear $24 million Antarctic Gateway Partnership project. The partnership is funded through the Australian Research Council’s Special Research Initiatives scheme and includes the University of Tasmania’s Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS) and AMC; CSIRO’s Oceans and Atmosphere Flagship; and the Australian Antarctic Division. Chief Investigator IMAS Professor Richard Coleman said the funding complemented research programs and priorities developed in Australia’s Antarctic Science Strategic Plan to understand the

A THREE-YEAR $24M PROJECT IS SET TO FURTHER ESTABLISH TASMANIA AS A GATEWAY FOR ANTARCTIC RESEARCH role of Antarctica and the Southern Ocean in the global climate system. “This project will further establish Tasmania as a gateway for Antarctic research, education, innovation and logistics, with research on Antarctic ice sheets and ice shelves, new understanding on polar marine ecosystems and biogeochemical cycles, and the development of specialist polar marine technologies,” Professor Coleman said. “The Antarctic Gateway Partnership program has four integrated themes of research, with a major focus on ice sheets, ice shelves and sea ice, and involves

collaboration with researchers from more than 10 countries. One of the largest uncertainties in estimates of future sea level rise is the response of the Antarctic ice shelves to the warming of the surrounding oceans. “To understand these dynamics we need to be able to take measurements beneath ice shelves and also under the sea ice, and to do much of this science in such a harsh environment we need new remotely-operated technologies.” Marine Technology and Polar Environments theme leader, AMC Principal Professor Neil Bose, said the project included $7.5 million

to build a next-generation hybrid autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) capable of exploring hundreds of kilometres under ice. Work is underway to establish the AUV facility at AMC in Launceston, including the recruitment of four new positions. The aim is to research, design and build the autonomous vehicles over the next three years in readiness for deployment in 2018, the final year of the project. Guiding this research and development is AUV and fluid mechanics expert Dr Alex Forrest and marine spatial analyst Dr Vanessa Lucieer.

“We’ll be looking at how we can facilitate data collection using the AUV to answer the key scientific questions from each of the Gateway themes,” Dr Forrest said. “This will require an AUV facility that can develop multiple types of vehicles, with the support staff necessary to target those projects. “One of the biggest challenges now is the conceptual design phase. “We need to build a vehicle, we need to build it quickly, so what instruments do we need on board? What are the attributes that we want the vehicle to have? “In essence, these vehicles are relatively simple in design, but it’s their range, capabilities, instruments and data sensors that we want to expand upon in a novel way.”

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ABOVE BOARD ❘ ISSUE 8 ❘ WINTER 2015

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