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In a world first, China fires powerful weather rocket from a sea drone

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In a world first, China fires powerful weather rocket from a sea drone

by Colm Gorey

5 DAYS AGO494 VIEWS

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The uncrewed semi-submersible vehicle developed by the Chinese Academy of Sciences with rocketsonde on board. Image: Siping Zheng

For the first time ever, China has launched a weather rocket from a drone semi-submersible in the Yellow Sea.

For decades, we have been using weather balloons to gather important weather data from kilometres above, but sometimes even these cannot get the information we need. For example, getting accurate meteorological and oceanographic data requires conducting ocean-based meteorological and oceanographic sampling of nearly three-quarters of the Earth’s surface.

This has traditionally been done using an extensive array of buoys, ships, aircraft and satellites. However, the logistics involved and challenges of hostile environments have led to the development of ‘weather rockets’ called rocketsonde capable of recording at altitudes as high as 8,000 metres.

Now, publishing their findings in the journal Advances in Atmospheric Sciences, researchers from the Chinese Academy of Sciences announced the world’s first launch of a rocketsonde from a semi-submersible drone.

“Launched from a long-duration unmanned semi-submersible vehicle, with strong mobility and large coverage of the sea area, rocketsonde can be used under severe sea conditions and will be more economical and applicable in the future,” said lead author Hongbin Chen.

The paper’s co-author, Dr Jun Li, added: “The unmanned semi-submersible vehicle is an ideal platform for marine meteorological environmental monitoring, and the atmospheric profile information provided by rocketsonde launched from this platform can improve the accuracy of numerical weather forecasts at sea and in coastal zones.”

The rocketsonde are expected to outperform both types of weather balloon currently operating, those being the dropsonde, which are carried to high altitudes and released to descend back to Earth; and driftsonde, which are enclosed in a gondola to be carried by winds. Both types are capable of operating between five days and a few months, but they cannot meet the needs of marine weather such as typhoons or fog.

The research team is now working towards a new sea drone that can carry various sensors including motion sensors and wave height readers that would work in tandem with the rocketsonde.

https://www.siliconrepublic.com/machines/china-weather-rocket-tiny-sea-drone
 
China deploys new rocket-launching robotic ship, but it’s not built for war

Mike Wehner @MikeWehner

February 1st, 2019 at 11:07 PM

When one of the world’s superpowers deploys a robotic ship capable of launching rockets it’s safe to assume that it’s going to raise plenty of eyebrows. Well, that’s exactly what China just did, but this particular vessel isn’t concerned with protecting territory to fending off invaders.

The boat, which was designed and deployed by Chinese scientists, is far more concerned with the climate and weather patterns than military goals. The autonomous watercraft successfully launched a sounding rocket, which is a tool used by weather researchers to monitor conditions over a massive area, and its maiden voyage was chronicled in a new paper published in Advances in Atmospheric Sciences.

The vessel is an unmanned semi-submersible vehicle (USSV for short) and it was built by the Institute of Atmospheric Physics. It’s operated remotely and offers much more control than weather buoys and more versatile than a weather balloon.

“The unmanned semi-submersible vehicle is an ideal platform for marine meteorological environmental monitoring, and the atmospheric profile information provided by [the sounding rocket] launched from this platform can improve the accuracy of numerical weather forecasts at sea and in coastal zones,” Dr. Jun Li, co-author of the paper, said in a statement.

The idea here was to create an ocean-based observation tool that could change positions as needed without requiring a manned presence on the ship itself. The team accomplished that task and proved that the robotic vessel is a viable option for ongoing weather observation over the ocean.

Going forward, an entire fleet of USSVs could be used to provide wide coverage over areas of the ocean that are traditionally much more difficult to monitor, especially when threats like typhoons spring up.

“We are currently developing a new generation of USSVs which can carry various sensors relevant to marine science, including conductivity–temperature–depth, acoustic Doppler current profiler, and motion sensors to provide vertical profiles of the conductivity, water temperature, current velocity, and wave height and direction,” lead author Hongbin Chen explains.

Such a network of robot ships could provide vital insights into ocean weather and improve warning systems for people on land as well as at sea.

https://bgr.com/2019/02/01/china-robot-ship-rocket-launch-weather/
 
Another first from China, meanwhile the anti-Chinese brigade like the indians are busy shooting poos from their assholes to open fields and streets lol.
 

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