A Virtual Ocean framework for environmentally adaptive, embedded acoustic navigation on autonomous underwater vehicles

Autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) are an increasingly capable robotic platform, with embedded acoustic sensing to facilitate navigation, communication, and collaboration. The global positioning system (GPS), ubiquitous for air- and terrestrial-based drones, cannot position a submerged AUV. Curre...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bhatt, EeShan Chetan
Other Authors: Schmidt, Henrik, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139972
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spelling ftmit:oai:dspace.mit.edu:1721.1/139972 2023-06-11T04:09:48+02:00 A Virtual Ocean framework for environmentally adaptive, embedded acoustic navigation on autonomous underwater vehicles Bhatt, EeShan Chetan Schmidt, Henrik Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering 2021-09-30T17:28:48.171Z application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139972 unknown Massachusetts Institute of Technology https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139972 orcid:0000-0003-0937-1193 In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted Copyright retained by author(s) https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/ Thesis 2021 ftmit 2023-05-29T08:47:04Z Autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) are an increasingly capable robotic platform, with embedded acoustic sensing to facilitate navigation, communication, and collaboration. The global positioning system (GPS), ubiquitous for air- and terrestrial-based drones, cannot position a submerged AUV. Current methods for acoustic underwater navigation employ a deterministic sound speed to convert recorded travel time into range. In acoustically complex propaganda environments, however, accurate navigation is predicated on how the sound speed structure affects propagation. The Arctic's Beaufort Gyre provides an excellent case study for this relationship via the Beaufort Lens, a recently observed influx of warm Pacific water that forms a widespread yet variable sound speed lens throughout the gyre. At short ranges, the lens intensifies multipath propagation and creates a dramatic shadow zone, deteriorating acoustic communication and navigation performance. The Artic also poses the additional operational challenge of an ice-covered, GPS-denied environment. This dissertation demonstrates a framework for a physics-based, model-aided, real-time conversion of recorded travel time into range--the first of its kind--which was essential to the successful AUV deployment and recovery in the Beaufort Sea, in March 2020. There are three nominal steps. First, we investigate the spatio-temporal variability of the Beaufort Lens. Second, we design a human-in-the-loop graphical decision-making framework to encode desired sound speed profile information into a lightweight, digital acoustic message for onboard navigation and communication. Lastly, we embed a stochastic, ray-based prediction of the group velocity as a function of extrapolated source and receiver locations. This framework is further validated by transmissions among GPS-aided modem buoys and improved upon to rival GPS accuracy and surpass GPS precision. The Arctic is one of the most sensitive regions to climate change, and as warmer surface temperatures and shrinking sea ice ... Thesis Arctic Beaufort Sea Climate change Sea ice DSpace@MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) Arctic Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection DSpace@MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
op_collection_id ftmit
language unknown
description Autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) are an increasingly capable robotic platform, with embedded acoustic sensing to facilitate navigation, communication, and collaboration. The global positioning system (GPS), ubiquitous for air- and terrestrial-based drones, cannot position a submerged AUV. Current methods for acoustic underwater navigation employ a deterministic sound speed to convert recorded travel time into range. In acoustically complex propaganda environments, however, accurate navigation is predicated on how the sound speed structure affects propagation. The Arctic's Beaufort Gyre provides an excellent case study for this relationship via the Beaufort Lens, a recently observed influx of warm Pacific water that forms a widespread yet variable sound speed lens throughout the gyre. At short ranges, the lens intensifies multipath propagation and creates a dramatic shadow zone, deteriorating acoustic communication and navigation performance. The Artic also poses the additional operational challenge of an ice-covered, GPS-denied environment. This dissertation demonstrates a framework for a physics-based, model-aided, real-time conversion of recorded travel time into range--the first of its kind--which was essential to the successful AUV deployment and recovery in the Beaufort Sea, in March 2020. There are three nominal steps. First, we investigate the spatio-temporal variability of the Beaufort Lens. Second, we design a human-in-the-loop graphical decision-making framework to encode desired sound speed profile information into a lightweight, digital acoustic message for onboard navigation and communication. Lastly, we embed a stochastic, ray-based prediction of the group velocity as a function of extrapolated source and receiver locations. This framework is further validated by transmissions among GPS-aided modem buoys and improved upon to rival GPS accuracy and surpass GPS precision. The Arctic is one of the most sensitive regions to climate change, and as warmer surface temperatures and shrinking sea ice ...
author2 Schmidt, Henrik
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering
format Thesis
author Bhatt, EeShan Chetan
spellingShingle Bhatt, EeShan Chetan
A Virtual Ocean framework for environmentally adaptive, embedded acoustic navigation on autonomous underwater vehicles
author_facet Bhatt, EeShan Chetan
author_sort Bhatt, EeShan Chetan
title A Virtual Ocean framework for environmentally adaptive, embedded acoustic navigation on autonomous underwater vehicles
title_short A Virtual Ocean framework for environmentally adaptive, embedded acoustic navigation on autonomous underwater vehicles
title_full A Virtual Ocean framework for environmentally adaptive, embedded acoustic navigation on autonomous underwater vehicles
title_fullStr A Virtual Ocean framework for environmentally adaptive, embedded acoustic navigation on autonomous underwater vehicles
title_full_unstemmed A Virtual Ocean framework for environmentally adaptive, embedded acoustic navigation on autonomous underwater vehicles
title_sort virtual ocean framework for environmentally adaptive, embedded acoustic navigation on autonomous underwater vehicles
publisher Massachusetts Institute of Technology
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139972
geographic Arctic
Pacific
geographic_facet Arctic
Pacific
genre Arctic
Beaufort Sea
Climate change
Sea ice
genre_facet Arctic
Beaufort Sea
Climate change
Sea ice
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139972
orcid:0000-0003-0937-1193
op_rights In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted
Copyright retained by author(s)
https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/
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