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

Jeff O'Brien, Terry Hammar, and Dave Fratantoni with AXIS probe launcher.

Jeff O'Brien, Terry Hammar, and Dave Fratantoni with AXIS probe launcher.
Jeff O'Brien, Terry Hammar, and Dave Fratantoni with AXIS probe launcher.
Jeff O'Brien, Terry Hammar, and Dave Fratantoni with AXIS probe launcher.
Jeff O'Brien, Terry Hammar, and Dave Fratantoni with AXIS probe launcher.
Comments (0)
217791
Kleindinst, Thomas N.
Jeff O'Brien, Terry Hammar, and Dave Fratantoni with AXIS probe launcher.
Still Image
06/07/2013
graphics/Dave_Fratantoni_AXIS_Probe/_DSC1267.jpg
The Autonomous eXpendable Instrument System (AXIS) is a white box about the size of a mini fridge that contains a carousel loaded with up to a dozen XBT probes. AXIS can be programmed to release a probe at a specific time or location.
Image Of the Day caption:
Typically, a common oceanographic instrument known as an eXpendable BathyThermograph (XBT) are deployed by hand from research and cargo ships to collect a variety of data including temperature and depth. WHOI engineers Jeff OBrien, Terry Hammar, and Dave Fratantoni (left to right) developed a robotic system that can automatically launch the probes and can be programmed to release up to 12 probes at specific times or locations, thus improving the efficiency of ocean data collection. AXIS (Autonomous eXpendable Instrument System) is currently installed on the M/V Oleander, a container ship that traverses the Gulf Stream between New Jersey and Bermuda weekly and the M/V Norr?na, a ferry operating between Denmark, the Faroe Islands, and Iceland.
Photo by Tom Kleindinst
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Labels
This item includes these files
Collections