- Sunday, August 19
- Friday, August 17
- Thursday, August 16
- Wednesday, August 15
- Monday, August 13
- Saturday, August 11
- Friday, August 10
- Wednesday, August 08
- Monday, August 06
- Saturday, August 04
- Thursday, August 02
- Wednesday, August 01
- Tuesday, July 31
- Monday, July 30
- Sunday, July 29
- Saturday, July 28
- Friday, July 27
- Thursday, July 26
- Monday, July 23
- Friday, July 20
- Thursday, July 19
- Tuesday, July 17
- Monday, July 16
- Saturday, July 14
- Friday, July 13
- Thursday, July 12
- Wednesday, July 11
- Saturday, July 30
- Friday, July 29
- Sunday, July 24
- Saturday, July 23
- Friday, July 22
- Thursday, July 21
- Wednesday, July 20
- Monday, July 18
- Sunday, July 17
- Saturday, July 16
- Friday, July 15
- Thursday, July 14
- Wednesday, July 13
- Tuesday, July 12
- Monday, July 11
- Sunday, July 10
- Sunday, July 10
- Saturday, July 09
- Thursday, July 07
- Tuesday, July 05
- Sunday, July 03
- Friday, July 01
- Thursday, June 30
- Wednesday, June 29
- Tuesday, June 28
- Monday, June 27
- Friday, June 03
- Wednesday, June 01
August 2012
July 2012
April 2012
March 2012
January 2012
October 2011
September 2011
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
March 2011
February 2011
October 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
OOI Team Launches Nex ...
The next major milestone in construction of the Ocean Observatories Initiative ...
It's 9:00 am. We have just finished recovering 10km of Segment 2 and the cable is being tested once again. We are getting ready to relay it along its final path while heading towards the buoy that was attached yesterday at the end of Segment 1. The buoy is about 2.5 miles away. Once we get to the buoy, we will recover Segment 1 on the port side while continuing to lay Segment 2 off the starboard side.
When similar lengths of cables are recovered on each side, we will clamp temporary beacons to the cables to verify their shape in water (catenary) and to adjust their lengths before splicing in the primary node. This process will help us ensure that the node is set precisely at the planned location. We are aiming for a positioning accuracy of 2% of the water depth, or just about 60 meters at 2,900m at Primary Node N1A. Our precision act is just about to start! The drawing above, courtesy of L-3 MariPro, should help explain the relaying of cables that is occurring this year.
The deployment of the first node will be a major project milestone and we are all anxiously looking forward to operations this weekend. The weather is cooperating so far. Pictures to come soon!
--Cecile Durand, OOI Marine Maintenance Manager, University of Washington, at sea aboard the TESubCom Dependable