Hydrothermal exploration and astrobiology: oases for life in distant oceans?

2004 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 81-95 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher R. German

High-temperature submarine hydrothermal fields on Earth's mid-ocean ridges play host to exotic ecosystems with fauna previously unknown to science. Because these systems draw significant energy from chemosynthesis rather than photosynthesis, it has been postulated that the study of such systems could have relevance to the origins of life and, hence, astrobiology. A major flaw to that argument, however, is that modern basalt-hosted submarine vents are too oxidizing and lack the abundant free hydrogen required to drive abiotic organic synthesis and/or the energy yielding reactions that the most primitive anaerobic thermophiles isolated from submarine vent-sites apparently require. Here, however, the progress over the past decade in which systematic search strategies have been used to identify previously overlooked venting on the slow-spreading Mid-Atlantic Ridge and the ultra-slow spreading Arctic and SW Indian Ridges is described. Preliminary identification of fault-controlled venting in a number of these sites has led to the discovery of at least two high-temperature hydrothermal fields hosted in ultramafic rocks which emit complex organic molecules in their greater than 360 °C vent-fluids. Whether these concentrations represent de novo organic synthesis within the hydrothermal cell remains open to debate but it is probable that many more such sites exist throughout the Atlantic, Arctic and SW Indian Oceans. One particularly intriguing example is the Gakkel Ridge, which crosses the floor of the Arctic Ocean. On-going collaborations between oceanographers and astrobiologists are actively seeking to develop a new class of free-swimming autonomous underwater vehicle, equipped with appropriate chemical sensors, to conduct long-range missions that will seek out, locate and investigate new sites of hydrothermal venting at the bottom of this, and other, ice-covered oceans.

Author(s):  
Trygve Olav Fossum ◽  
Petter Norgren ◽  
Ilker Fer ◽  
Frank Nilsen ◽  
Zoe Koenig ◽  
...  

ChemInform ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 24 (9) ◽  
pp. no-no
Author(s):  
L. P. TURCHANINOVA ◽  
E. N. SUKHOMAZOVA ◽  
N. A. KORCHEVIN ◽  
E. N. DERYAGINA ◽  
M. G. VORONKOV

2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Yanji Liu ◽  
Guichen Zhang ◽  
Chidong Che

To solve the localization failure problem of terrain-aided navigation (TAN) system of the autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) caused by large area of underwater flat terrain in the Arctic, a navigation system with relocation part is constructed to enhance the robustness of localization. The system uses particle filter to estimate the AUV’s position and reduce the nonlinear noise disturbance, and the prior motion information is added to avoid the mismatching caused by the similar altitude of low-resolution map. Based on the estimate data and the measured altitude data, the normalized innovation square (NIS) is used to evaluate the differentiation of terrain sequence, and the differentiation is used as a judgment of whether the AUV is in the switch location. A simulation experiment is carried out on the 500 m resolution underwater map of the Arctic. The results show that adding the prior motion information can restrain the divergence of the estimator; NIS can accurately reflect the sharp change of terrain sequence. After the relocation process, the AUV can still maintain the positioning accuracy within 2 km after running 50 km in the area including flat and rough terrain. This research solves the problem of localization errors in the Arctic flat terrain in the system level and provides a solution for the application of underwater navigation in the Arctic.


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