The new iteration of the wavy drifter (MELOA)
Article Sidebar
Citacions a Google Acadèmic
Main Article Content
Pedro Gonçalves
Tiago Marques
Bruno Loureiro
João Borges de Sousa
The MELOA (Multi-purpose/Multi-sensor Extra Light Oceanography Apparatus), H2020 project, proposes to develop a low-cost, easy-to-handle, wave resilient, multi-purpose, multi-sensor, extra light surface drifter for use in all water environments, ranging from deep-sea to inland waters, including coastal areas, river plumes and surf zones. The device will be developed as an upgrade to the WAVY drifter (Figure-1) conceived by the LSTS - Faculty of Engineering of the University of Porto, which was used to measure the surface circulation forced by wave breaking, including detailed structure of rifts and the littoral drift current. The new iteration of the wavy drifter improves upon the older one by adding new functionality like wave spectrum computation from collected data, and adding sensors such as a Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU), Atmospheric Pressure Sensor (ATM), a new and improved GNSS modules with new positioning solutions, a new GSM supporting encrypted GPRS connections for real-time data transmission as well as more internal memory. Furthermore a new MCU (Microcontroller Unit) was chosen to integrate all this sensors and data collection and a new firmware package. To adapt to users’ requests and different mission profiles there are five WAVY models available, all with different sensor packages and functionality: Basic and Litoral for coastal operations, Ocean, Ocean ATMO and Ocean Plus for open sea. For the later a Satellite transceiver is used for communication instead of the GSM module, to transmit the results of wave spectrum computation.
Article Details
Com citar
Gonçalves, Pedro et al. “The new iteration of the wavy drifter (MELOA)”. Instrumentation viewpoint, no. 20, https://raco.cat/index.php/Instrumentation/article/view/348187.
Articles més llegits del mateix autor/a
- Renato Mendes, João Borges de Sousa, José C.B. da Silva, João Miguel Dias, The Role of networked robotic systems to survey coastal phenomena: the Douro river plume case study , Instrumentation viewpoint: 2018: Núm.: 20
- José Pinto, Maria João Costa, Paulo Sousa Dias, João Borges de Sousa, Studying the Pacific Subtropical Front with multiple assets , Instrumentation viewpoint: 2018: Núm.: 20