RV Roger Revelle (AGOR-24)
R/V Roger Revelle in Koror, Palau in 2016
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History | |
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United States | |
Name | Roger Revelle |
Namesake | Roger Randall Dougan Revelle, a scientist, Naval officer, and scholar of the University of California, San Diego, founder of Office of Naval Research, and was one of the first scientists to study global warming and the movement of Earth's tectonic plates |
Owner | U.S. Navy[1] |
Operator | Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego under agreement with Office of Naval Research[1] |
Builder | Halter Marine Inc., Gulfport, Mississippi |
Laid down | 9 December 1993 |
Launched | 20 April 1995 |
Acquired | by the U.S. Navy, 11 June 1996, as RV Roger Revelle (T-AGOR-24) |
Maiden voyage | Mississippi to San Diego, California, in July 1996 |
In service | leased to Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, June 1996 |
Identification |
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Notes | Radio Call Sign: KAOU[1] |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | Thomas G Thompson-class oceanographic research ship |
Type | Global-Class Auxiliary General-Purpose Research Vessel |
Tonnage | |
Displacement | 3,512 long tons[1] |
Length | 277 feet (84.4 m)[1] |
Beam | 52 feet 5 inches (16.0 m)[1] |
Draft | 17 feet (5.2 m)[1] |
Propulsion | diesel-electric, two 3,000hp z-drives; 1,180 hp Azimuthing jet[1] |
Speed | 11.7 knots (21.7 km/h; 13.5 mph) "variable with conditions"[1] |
Range | 15,000 NM at 12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph) (fuel)[1] |
Endurance | 52 days at 12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph) (fuel)[1] |
Capacity | Fuel: 227,500 (planning)[1] |
Crew | 22 civilian mariners; 37 scientific party[1] |
Armament | none |
R/V Roger Revelle is an auxiliary general-purpose research vessel (AGOR) operated by Scripps Institution of Oceanography under charter agreement with Office of Naval Research as part of the University-National Oceanographic Laboratory System (UNOLS) fleet.[2]
Built in Mississippi[]
Roger Revelle was built by Halter Marine Inc., Gulfport, Mississippi. She was laid down on 9 December 1993 and launched on 20 April 1995. She was delivered to the U.S. Navy 11 June 1996, as RV Roger Revelle (T-AGOR-24), a oceanographic research ship.
[]
- GPS Furuno GP150 (2)
- ADU GPS Ashtech Attitude-sensing System
- RADAR Sperry 3 cm, 10 cm
- Acoustic Positioning System Nautronix 916 SBL/LBL
- Fathometer Furuno FV 700 50 kHz
- Doppler Speed Log – ODEC 200 kHz
- Doppler Speed Log – EDO 600 kHz
- Dynamic Positioning - Kongsberg DP-System
- ADF - Kongsberg-Simrad Taiyo
- Gyro - Sperry MK 37 (2)
Oceanographic data acquisition sensors and processing systems[]
As of 2014, the ship comes standard with these set of Oceanographic sensors; with provisions, space, and modularity to add a variety of other scientific sensors and equipment.
- Furuno FAR2117 X-Band Radar coupled to a WAMOS wave and surface current monitoring system. Configured to 1.5 nm range, with antenna rotation speed at 42 rpm.
- RD Instruments 75 & 150 kHz broadband Acoustic Doppler Currents Profiler (ADCP), running University of Hawaii SOEST's UHDAS software.
- UCSD Ocean Physics Group 50 and 140 kHz High-Resolution Hydrographic Doppler Sonar System (HDSS), using UCSD-OPG's HDSS software (similar in function to the ADCP).
- Bell BGM-3 Gravimeter, with LaCoste & Romberg portable gravimeter for gravity tie and calibration.
- Turo Quoll Fast Deep XBT system
- Kongsberg EM122 multibeam echosounder sonar (bathymetry)
- Knudsen Engineering 3260 and 320B/R 3.5 & 12 kHz singlebeam echosounder sub-bottom profiler.[3]
- iXBlue Hydrins, and Phins-III are the main Motion Reference Units (Gyro's) used by the ship's standard Oceanographic sensors, with feeds available throughout the ship in UDP or Serial formats.
- Trimble SPS351, Furuno GP150, and Ashtech ADU3 GPS' provide redundant and accurate GPS and attitude information at various frequencies for the science equipment. These feeds can be accessed throughout the vessel by science teams via either UDP or Serial.
- Trimble GPS and End Run time servers that provides NTP GPS-derived time, IRG-B and 1 PPS synronization along with other time measurements
- MET; a comprehensive meteorological system and software suite developed by Scripps Institution of Oceanography, providing wind speed/direction, relative humidity, barometric pressure, long and shortwave radiation, air temperature, sea surface temperature, and precipitation. The software also provides a winch load data during towing, dredging, and CTD operations.
Winches[]
- Markey DUTW-9-11 traction-drum winch with dual storage drums. Normally 15,000 m of 9/16" 3 x 19 trawl wire is on one storage drum and 10,000 m of 0.680" electromechanical cable on the other. Wires over the side lead to A-frame or main deck crane. Capable of fiber optic cable through A-frame.
- Markey DESH 5 hydrographic winch, with 10,000 m of 1/4" 3 x 19 hydrographic wire, or 10,000 m of 0.322" three-conductor electromechanical CTD cable on Lebus grooving. Wire drums are interchangeable, one is stowed while the other is in use. Wires lead over starboard side via retractable hydroboom.
- CAST-6/Allied Crane CTD Handling System with 10,000 m of 0.322" three-conductor electromechanical CTD cable on Lebus grooving. Wire leads over starboard side via Allied crane articulating boom.
- Assorted portable winch and wire combinations available for cruise-specific requirements.
Support equipment[]
- Primary, North American cranes (3) on starboard quarter, main deck and on port side, 02 level.
- Morgan Marine cranes (2), normally on foredeck and at other locations to suit mission.
- Fritz-Culver A-frame at stern, retractable hydroboom on starboard side by staging bay door.
- Blue Extension crane on starboard 01 aft of rescue boat davit.
- Extensive (~3,000) bolt down fittings for securing removable equipment on all decks and inside laboratories (2' X 2' pattern). 1" sockets outside, 1/2" sockets inside.
- Uncontaminated seawater supply to all labs (except computer lab).
- Through-hull instrument well in staging bay, nominal 24" diam. tube.
- Two installed Price A300 compressors provide 1850 psi air for seismic work.
Computing environment[]
Shipboard computer systems consists of a cluster of Linux (CentOS) servers capable of up to 20 Terabytes of available and expandable cruise data storage in RAID6 configuration. The cluster provides email, intranet, NAS, DHCP, proxy, SAMBA, Active Directory, data processing, and data procurement services. Internet is provided using a combination of UNOLS-designed proprietary satellite system (C-Band), shore cellular network (3G, 4G/LTE), and/or Inmarsat FleetBroadband (L-Band). In addition to the cluster, there is a wide array of data acquisition computers hooked up to a modular display array. All live processed data from the ship's standard set of acquisition systems is displayed on the array, and provide live feedback of the ship's underway data. There are repeating displays in the main lab, and hydro lab that shows MET and navigation data.
The various Windows, Linux, and Mac acquisition machines perform data acquisition, archiving and processing functions on many of the permanently installed data collection systems. All data is centralized in the cluster.
Sister ships[]
The Roger Revelle and three other research ships were all built to the same basic design. The three sister ships are R/V Thomas G. Thompson (UW), NOAAS Ronald H. Brown (NOAA) and R/V Atlantis (Woods Hole).
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Scripps Institution of Oceanography. "R/V Roger Revelle General specifications". Scripps Institution of Oceanography. Retrieved February 9, 2014.
- ^ "Ships/Facilities". University National Oceanographic Laboratory System. Retrieved February 9, 2014.
- ^ Chirp 3260 Accessed 03-March 2019
External links[]
- Roger Revelle at UCSD
- NavSource Online: Service Ship Photo Archive - RV Roger Revelle (T-AGOR-24)
- The Research Vessel Roger Revelle
- Roger Revelle deck plans
- University-National Oceanographic Laboratory System research vessels
- Thomas G. Thompson-class oceanographic research ships
- Ships built in Mississippi
- 1995 ships
- Scripps Institution of Oceanography