RV Sonne (2014)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
RV Sonne 2014 1.jpg
The RV Sonne in Kiel in 2014.
History
Germany
NameRV Sonne
OwnerFederal Ministry of Education and Research (Germany)
OperatorBriese Schiffahrts GmbH
Port of registryGermany Germany
BuilderMeyer Werft, Germany
Cost124.4 million
Laid down12. April 2013
Launched5. April 2014
Christened11. Juli 2014
Acquired17. November 2014[1]
HomeportWilhelmshaven[2]
Identification
StatusActive as of 2018
General characteristics
Class and typeResearch vessel
Tonnage
  • 8,554 GT
  • 2,566 NT
Length118.42 m (388 ft 6 in) [3]
Beam20.6 m (67 ft 7 in) [3]
Draft6.4 m (21 ft 0 in) [3]
Depth9.8 m (32 ft 2 in) [3]
Installed power4 GenSets – Wärtsilä diesel engines each 1,620 kW / 1,572 ekW [3]
Propulsion2 diesel electric engines, each 2350 kW
Speed15.0 knots (27.8 km/h) [3]
Crew35 + 40 scientists [3]

The RV Sonne (German for Sun) is a German deep ocean research vessel. The ship became available for science in December 2014[4] and it operates mainly in the Pacific and the Indian Oceans.[3] She is registered in Wilhelmshaven and replaced its predecessor of the same name.

Career[]

An order worth 124.4 million for a new research ship to replace the older research ship Sonne was placed by the German federal ministry for education and research (90%) together with the coastal states Lower Saxony, Schleswig-Holstein, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Bremen and Hamburg (10%) in May 2011.

The construction took place in Meyer Werft in Papenburg and the Sonne left the dock in April 2014. It was christened in July 2014 and handed over in November 2014.

The Sonne is a multipurpose working platform for marine and related disciplines: physical and biological oceanography, marine geology, marine and atmospheric chemistry, marine geophysics and meteorology.[3] The ship operates mainly in the Pacific and the Indian Oceans and is owned by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research. It sails under the German Federal State Flag.

Equipment[]

RV Sonne is equipped to cover a wide spectrum of ocean research. An A-frame crane at the stern has a lifting capacity of 30 t. This can be used for deploying submersibles and other heavy equipment. Four cranes with a lifting capacity of 10 t and three small cranes (2 x 2 t and 1 x 0.5 t) allow the transport of research material across the ship. A winch enables deploying devices to the ocean floor to 12,000 m of water depth.

Some of the tasks of the RV Sonne are to conduct seabed surveys (bathymetry) with different high-precision echo-sounding systems and seismic surveys. These systems can be disturbed by air bubbles created near the water surface and/or along the hull and swept down under the arrays. To avoid this, a special hull form was designed and tested in water basins. A dent runs along both sides of the hull to guide water and bubbles behind the echo sounding arrays installed within an integrated gondola near the bow. Furthermore, the outer hull surface was kept as smooth as possible to prevent production of air bubbles through cavitation processes. Further the entire ship is tuned to reduce interference from intrinsic sound and a deployable stabilization system with active fins minimizes unwanted self-motion of the ship.

For troubleshooting during the scientific expeditions, the ship is equipped with several workshops: a deck workshop (for heavy mechanical work), an electronic workshop, a machinery workshop (for fine mechanical work) and an electric workshop.

Up to 25 twenty-foot ISO containers can be stored on board (4 of them inside). There are 550 m² of scientific laboratories.

References[]

  1. ^ "Übergabe des Forschungsschiffes "Sonne"". Meyerwerft.de. 17 November 2014. Retrieved 17 November 2014.
  2. ^ "The new RV Sonne". German Marine Research Consortium. Retrieved 19 November 2014.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i von Bröckel, Klaus (2013). "The New German Deep Sea Research Vessel "Sonne"" (PDF). Hydrographische Nachrichten (95).
  4. ^ "Cruise schedule and Equipment plan". Control Station German Research Vessels. Retrieved 19 November 2014.

External links[]


Retrieved from ""