Transformed into a scientific platform, the ship enabled a team of
researchers from the University of Geneva (UNIGE) to take advantage of
her exclusive features in order carry out an exclusive campaign of
physical and biological measurements along the Gulf Stream. A series of
events will be held onboard the ship, which will remain moored at Tijdok
dock, Oostende, Belgium, until August 30, before setting sail for
London in the United Kingdom.
The MS Tûranor PlanetSolar returned to the old continent after 23
days of navigation. At an average speed of 4.5 knots, travelling 4598
kilometers across the North Atlantic proved to be difficult in terms of
navigation.
“The weather conditions were particularly unfavorable during this crossing! The wind, first during our southern descent, then the current, and finally a much lower than average amount of sunshine in the region for this time of year!” said Gérard d’Aboville, captain of the ship.
The “PlanetSolar DeepWater”
scientific expedition’s last phase of measurements will begin in
Oostende. “The final phase is of particular interest because data will
be collected on the outskirts on an urban area. We have already observed
some very interesting results around Boston.
I look forward to discovering what measures will be taken around the
British capital,” explains Jérôme Kasparian, UNIGE researcher and member
of the expedition’s scientific committee.
Alongside the events dedicated to local authorities, the net destined
for use during the floating plastic waste collection campaign (carried
out in collaboration with Waste Free Oceans) will be tested during the
Belgian stop.
Next, the ship will leave for London, United Kingdom, the stopover
which will conclude the phase of exclusive measurements conducted as
part of the “PlanetSolar DeepWater” scientific expedition
The “PlanetSolar DeepWater” scientific expedition
Launched in Florida in early June, the “PlanetSolar DeepWater”
expedition covered over 8,000 kilometers, using advanced instruments and
the expertise of the UNIGE scientists to collect a continuous series of
physical and biological measurements along the Gulf Stream, both in the water and in the air. Led by Professor Martin Beniston, the research team studied the key parameters of climate regulation,
namely aerosols and phytoplankton, in order to better understand the
complex interactions between the ocean and the atmosphere, as well as
the role these interactions play in climate change.
The researchers were particularly interested in the phenomenon of
ocean vortexes—large whirlpools that break away from the main part of
the Gulf Stream—that influence heat exchanges with the atmosphere as
well as the behavior of phytoplankton.
From the ships blog, Gustavo Sousa writes: For the next two days, we
sailed with clouds above us, sometimes with the sun saying hi, but
those were rare moments, and at night we couldn’t see anything. Until
Friday night, when the clouds finally went away, and I saw the most
beautiful sky that I had seen in a long time, perhaps in my whole life. I
could see stars that would be impossible to see inland, even with a
telescope because of the light pollution, complete constellations maybe
like our ancestors saw when they named them, giant castles in the sky
that I could stare at forever… if I wasn’t tired and if it was a little
bit warmer outside.
http://cleantechnica.com/2013/08/30/planetsolar-deepwater-scientific-expedition-returns-to-europe/
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