Research News

High School Students Build Antarctic Submersible

Two female high school graduates build an underwater, camera-equipped "rover" that can operate beneath polar ice

Shipping and assembling some scientific instruments in Antarctica can cost millions of dollars, thanks in part to the logistics needed to get materials and personnel to the southernmost continent on Earth.

But a relatively meager $5,000 investment returned a wealth of experience for students at a California High School and the research team with whom they worked at McMurdo Station, the National Science Foundation's (NSF) logistics hub in Antarctica.

Using "off-the-shelf" materials and working with graduate students and technicians from marine biologist Gretchen Hofmann's laboratory at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB), two female graduates of Cabrillo High School in Lompoc, Calif., built an underwater, camera-equipped "rover" that appears to be able to meet the challenges of the harshest environments on Earth.

The submersible rig has been dubbed M'RAJE (pronounced "mirage"), from the first initials of its creators, and it is providing Hofmann and her team with an extra set of eyes to observe fish in their natural environments--a task made difficult in waters frequently covered by many meters of ice.

Hofmann studies the environmental genomics of Antarctic fishes and how they respond to variations in water temperatures, responses that could tie closely to climate change.

Competitive Roots

For Hofman, the melding of research and education is a serious priority. M'RAJE was built by Ryan Garner and Amanda Wilson, both high-school seniors at Cabrillo High at the time. The two worked closely with graduate students Jessica Dutton, Mackenzie Zippay and Elizabeth Hoaglund in Hofmann's lab to turn the design into a workable prototype.

"I really like how Gretchen found these girls and emphasized the 'women in science' dimension of the project," noted Dutton, who acted as a liaison between Hofmann's laboratory and the rover team.

Back in 2005, when they were juniors, Garner and Wilson were members of a team at Cabrillo that competed and placed highly in the Marine Advanced Technology Education (MATE) Center's Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV) design competition. 

Working with Ali Whitmer, the director of education at UCSB's Marine Science Institute, and Robert Ranard and Shirley Pillus, who coached the winning 2005 team, Hofmann encouraged Garner and Wilson to design a rover that was better adapted to polar waters.

"We wanted it to be specifically designed to do research in Antarctica," said Dutton. "We knew the design would have to take into account things like how big a hole we are able to drill in the ice," an access point for the ocean.

Fresh Set of Eyes

Although scuba divers usually assist Hofmann's team in scouting the underwater landscape, a successful rover design could complement the work that human divers can do. For example, the rover has a maximum tether length of 100 feet, which allows it to operate at the outer limits of safe diving for humans.

"We've never really been able, ourselves, to look at the habitat down there," said Dutton. "But we can take a rover out as a team and operate it independently."

M'RAJE made roughly 10 successful dives during the last Antarctic research season, between October and December 2007.

Shortly after M'RAJE was successfully tested in the Antarctic, the 2007 international ROV competition--sponsored by the NSF-supported MATE Center in Monterey, Calif.--was held in St. John's, Newfoundland, in Canada. M'RAJE successfully competed in the previous year's MATE competition.

In recognition of the International Polar Year (IPY), the 2007 international ROV competition challenged students to design and build ROVs for operation in polar environments. The competition also challenged students to increase their understanding of polar regions and how these regions impact--and are being impacted by--global climate.

-- Peter West, (703) 292-7761 pwest@nsf.gov  

This Behind the Scenes article was provided to LiveScience in partnership with the National Science Foundation.