New Wave Media

May 28, 2014

ASL Builds Custom Instrument for Hydrothermal Vent Flow

Image courtesy of ASL Environmental Sciences

Image courtesy of ASL Environmental Sciences

ASL Environmental Sciences Inc. has been awarded a $500,000 contract by the University of Georgia to build a reciprocal transmission acoustic scintillation instrument to measure the flow dynamics of a hydrothermal vent plume for a research project led by Dr. Daniela Di Iorio of the Department of Marine Sciences.

The instrument will be installed at the Ocean Networks Canada NEPTUNE cabled observatory at the Endeavour hydrothermal vent site, approximately 300 kilometers off the west coast of Vancouver Island, in 2,200-meter water depth. The deployment is scheduled for 2016, with logistical support from Ocean Networks Canada.

 The instrument will employ advanced signal processing techniques and two-way acoustic transmissions to measure the rise velocity of the plume and its turbulent properties in near-real time. Long-term measurements of these properties, in conjunction with three-dimensional plume models, will advance understanding of the interaction between hydrothermal vent fluids and the surrounding ocean and how that supports the unique ecosystem found at the vents.

aslenv.com
 

GeorgiaUniversity of GeorgiaWest Coast
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