We use cookies to improve your experience, some are essential for the operation of this site.

ASV JetYak leaving Bikini Island with R/V Alucia in the distance.

ASV JetYak leaving Bikini Island with R/V Alucia in the distance.
ASV JetYak leaving Bikini Island with R/V Alucia in the distance.
ASV JetYak leaving Bikini Island with R/V Alucia in the distance.
ASV JetYak leaving Bikini Island with R/V Alucia in the distance.
Comments (0)
411028
Buesseler, Kenneth O.
ASV JetYak leaving Bikini Island with R/V Alucia in the distance.
Still Image
01/21/2015
JetYak-KB.jpg
Caption from Oceanus magazine, Vol. 52, No. 2, pg. 36:
A WHOI autonomous vehicle called the JetYak motors into Bikini Lagoon. It is equipped with a sensor to sample water and detect radioactive compounds.
Image Of the Day caption:
A remotely controlled "JetYak" surface vehicle leaves a beach on Bikini Atoll recently during a trip by WHOI chemists Ken Buesseler and Matt Charette. Use of the JetYak is led by Chip Breier, who equipped it with a system that collects samples of cesium isotopes to study the continued release of radioactive material from sites nearby where the U.S. conducted atmospheric nuclear weapons tests in the 1940s and 50s. That plus naturally occurring isotopes such as potassium-40 form the bulk of the "background radiation" against which Buesseler and others measure radiation from the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant.
Photo by Ken Buesseler
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
http://blog.safecast.org/2015/01/hello-bikini/
Labels
This item includes these files
Collections