Oct 09 02
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Hybis is one of the other vehicles on Discovery. It’s a remotely operated vehicle with a scoop on the bottom, so it goes down on a cable (10km of cable) and can then be driven gently along the sea floor to find something interesting to sample. Because it’s on a cable, it can provide live video from two different cameras (one forward-looking and one downward-looking), and has lots of power for lights, etc. It belongs to Dr. Bramley Merton from the National Oceanography Centre, Southampton (NOCS), who is a big name in the field of black smokers. He also happens to be a very interesting guy to hang out with, and has a real interest in trying out new technologies, such as using autonomous vehicles to do this stuff. Bramley is the reason I got involved with the Autosub team in the first place.

Hybis, a remotely operated vehicle with a scoop for collecting samples.

Hybis, a remotely operated vehicle with a scoop for collecting samples.

Hybis is along for two reasons, firstly to test it in deep water in preparation for its use in the Carribean in March, where it will be used to visit the black smokers that Autosub will hopefully discover, and secondly because last year it rescued a lander that had been lost on the bottom, so if something goes wrong on Autosub and it doesn’t return to the surface, Hybis might be able to retrieve it.

Today hasn’t been Hybis’s day, however. It was supposed to have been launched several hours ago to go to about 5600m. However, the winch it was attached to stopped working with it about 100m below the surface. After a long delay, they managed to get Hybis back (the picture is of Hybis coming out after it’s dive), but since then they’ve been repairing and testing the winch. Hopefully by tomorrow morning Hybis will be on the bottom, but at present everything is in limbo.

The current plan is to launch Autosub for its deep test tomorrow morning as well. We spent today putting everything back together (they even got me ended up grovelling under the sub putting casings on and attaching instruments), and the team seem confident that it’ll work. The good news is that the threatened 5m waves haven’t arrived. It’s been rougher today, but not nearly as bad as we feared. We’re due west of Lisbon, the sea here is warm, and hopefully we’ll have a lovely sunny day tomorrow.

Article Series - RSS Discovery

  1. First Day on RSS Discovery
  2. Sending Autosub for a swim
  3. What we’re doing in the middle of the Atlantic
  4. Meet Hybis
  5. Field Robotics is Hard!
  6. A Record Dive!
  7. Pictures from the deep
  8. What you’ve been waiting for… Cake!
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