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4: Robots, Satellites, and Observatories

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    31567
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    In Douglas Adams’s five-part trilogy The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy (1995), earthling Arthur Dent narrowly escapes Earth’s destruction thanks to an extraterrestrial Good Samaritan who is field-testing a not-so-dependable computerized guide to the galaxy. Their adventures, full of strange technological inventions, bear modest similarities to the technology-enhanced lives of oceanographers.

    The application of electronic sensors for observing, measuring, and adventuring into the world ocean has provided a view of the ocean as never before (minus the leaps through hyperspace). These sensors—attached to ships, subs, satellites, robots, and even animals—have dramatically changed our ability to investigate and understand the ocean. Our 21st-century view of the ocean feels like a trip to a galaxy far, far away.

    The ever-expanding fleet of sensor-outfitted platforms that fly above, glide on top, or dive below the surface of the ocean belongs to a broad category of tools known as ocean observing systems. Here we include any platform or sensor that permits observations and measurements at a distance. Independent and self-navigating platforms, such as satellites and autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs), fit the definition to a tee. Tools as simple as drifters and as complex as seafloor observatories may also fall into this category. Some oceanographers might include conductivity-temperature-depth instruments, or CTDs, in this category (covered in Chapter 13). Most importantly, the tools of ocean observing systems share a common goal: to expand the reach of human senses over broad scales of space and time (e.g., Lee et al. 2017).

    As oceanographers increase their ability to observe all parts of the ocean and connect measurements across space and time, a new and vital understanding of Earth and its ocean system will emerge. Our ability to survive in the coming centuries may well depend on the robotic eyes and ears of the sea. Like Arthur Dent, we may return to a restored Earth thanks in part to these platforms. That day, when it comes, may bring new meaning to “thanks for all the fish.”


    This page titled 4: Robots, Satellites, and Observatories is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by W. Sean Chamberlin, Nicki Shaw, and Martha Rich (Blue Planet Publishing) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.