Long-baseline acoustic navigation for under-ice autonomous underwater vehicle operations
Long-baseline acoustic navigation for under-ice autonomous underwater vehicle operations
Date
2008-05-19
Authors
Jakuba, Michael V.
Roman, Christopher N.
Singh, Hanumant
Murphy, Christopher A.
Kunz, Clayton G.
Willis, Claire
Sato, Taichi
Sohn, Robert A.
Roman, Christopher N.
Singh, Hanumant
Murphy, Christopher A.
Kunz, Clayton G.
Willis, Claire
Sato, Taichi
Sohn, Robert A.
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Abstract
The recent Arctic GAkkel Vents Expedition (AGAVE) to the Arctic Ocean’s Gakkel
Ridge (July/August 2007) aboard the Swedish ice-breaker I/B Oden employed autonomous
underwater vehicles (AUVs) for water-column and ocean bottom surveys.
These surveys were unique among AUV operations to date in requiring georeferenced
navigation in proximity to the seafloor beneath permanent and moving
ice cover. We report results for long-baseline (LBL) acoustic navigation during autonomous
under-ice surveys near the seafloor and adaptation of the LBL concept
for several typical operational situations including navigation in proximity to the
ship during vehicle recoveries. Fixed seafloor transponders were free-fall deployed
from the ship for deep positioning. The ship’s helicopter collected acoustic travel
times from several locations to geo-reference the transponders’ locations, subject
to the availability of openings in the ice. Two shallow beacons suspended from the
ship provided near-surface spherical navigation in ship-relative coordinates. During
routine recoveries, we used this system to navigate the vehicles into open water
near the ship before commanding them to surface. In cases where a vehicle was
impaired, its position was still determined acoustically through some combination
of its acoustic modem, the fixed seafloor transponders, the ship-deployed transponders,
and an on-board backup relay transponder. The techniques employed included
ranging adapted for a moving origin and hyperbolic navigation.
Description
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2008. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of John Wiley & Sons for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Field Robotics 25 (2008): 861-879, doi:10.1002/rob.20250.