This invention relates generally to methods and systems for performing a subsea positioning and surveying using remote tracking and guidance of subsea probes and, more particularly positioning subsea probes to a desired location using acoustic transducers.
A problem commonly encountered underwater is an inability to accurately determine absolute position. Because high frequency radio waves do not propagate through water, direct reception of GPS or other RF signals, which would otherwise provide good positional information, is not possible. Long baseline positioning systems use multiple transponders that are placed far apart on the seafloor. Their locations must be surveyed after deployment and they must eventually be retrieved, making their use cumbersome and costly.
Being able to track the exact position, including coordinates and depth, of an object under the water surface in real time is a challenge, which can be presently overcome if a surface vessel accompanies the subsea object in near vicinity (close geodesic coordinates). The surface vessel either needs to be connected to the under-water object through an umbilical, or it needs to be equipped with sophisticated communications equipment, which can receive and interpret detailed data from navigation sensors on board the under-water object. This mode of operation has two main disadvantages. First, the aforementioned navigation sensors on board the under-water objects (which includes precision gyros and inertial sensors) are both costly and comprise a significant drain on the power source of the under-water object (for example, the batteries in Autonomous Underwater Vehicles). Secondly, any surface vessel capable of operating offshore and analyzing navigation data from the under-water object is fairly large and expensive to operate. Current methods for delivering subsea probes, such as those embodied in U.S. Pat. Nos. 9,090,319 and 6,854,410, either require expensive autonomous systems that if lost will carry a substantial cost, or require to be tethered, which is operationally slower and therefore more expensive.
Further, in many commercial offshore scenarios, such as oil and gas exploration and production areas, many other vessels operate simultaneously, placing time constraints on the operational schedule of a vessel to avoid collisions with other vessels and therefore further increasing the costs.
There are many commercial offshore applications in which one surface vessel deploys and retrieves multiple subsea probes. Examples include ocean bottom seismic surveys, chemical surveys for environmental toxins or hydrocarbons (“sniffing”), or offshore electromagnetic methods (controlled-source electromagnetic or magneto-telluric surveys), such as those embodied in U.S. Pat. Nos. 9,013,953, 7,109,717 or 8,579,545
Many present subsea navigation methods rely on technology which is dual-use, i.e., which can be used for both military and commercial applications, and which therefore adds extra time and cost to sell equipment and services across international borders. A simple technology, which can track the position of an under-water object, which has no meaningful military applications, can be desirable, especially in the global nature of many subsea applications, such as oil and gas exploration and production.
In many applications, existing acoustic communications between an under-water object and a surface vessel use costly subsea modems, while the requirements are limited to navigation- or other low-bandwidth data. Further, many off-the-shelf modems do not meet the requirements for use in deep water, and specifically for use in ultra-deep-water oil and gas exploration and production applications. Therefore, a low-cost node which yields navigation data and which can be deployed in shallow and deep water alike will significantly lower the cost of operations.
There exists a need for an accurate method to determine the position of such under-water objects (seismic nodes, chemical nodes, electromagnetic loggers) without the surface vessel having to be in the near vicinity, while the under-water object reaches its destination, which would increase the productivity of these costly survey methods. Similarly, there exists a need for an effective method and system for delivering subsea probes to a desired and precisely predetermined location on the sea floor that can later be retrieved and reused, which is less costly than fully maneuverable autonomous underwater vehicles or submersibles.
In one aspect, this disclosure is related to a cost-effective system and method to track the exact position of an under-water object, which can fundamentally change the mode of operation of many commercial tasks in the offshore and subsea industries. One exemplary embodiment of the system of the present disclosure may be used for many quality control surveys for offshore construction applications, which can be changed from deploying tethered Remote Operating Vehicles (ROV's) to Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV's). Another example embodiment of the present disclosure can include offshore data loggers, such as in ocean-bottom seismic surveys or EM-geophysics surveys (controlled-source electromagnetic or magneto-telluric) which can, instead of being drop-deployed by a surface vessel, move to their destined location partially self-propelled and with low-cost on-board navigation and propulsion.
In another aspect, this disclosure is related to a non-dual use technology solution, which relies on propagation time triangulation and waveform analysis of customized acoustic pulses to find object coordinates under the water surface, without requiring a large surface vessel, or sophisticated navigation sensors attached to the object, for subsea localization of an under-water object.
In another aspect, this disclosure is related to a group of acoustic transducers in a triangular configuration, which may be located at a depth shallow enough to allow for easy wireless or wired communication to surface vessels, and track a remote object by exchanging specific acoustic pulses, with another acoustic transducer placed on the under-water object to be tracked. Objects to be tracked can include, but are not limited to, subsea nodes, subsea probes, AUV's or any other object(s) to be tracked that may need to be tracked above or below water.
In another aspect, this disclosure is related to a system having at least one transducer that may be part of a fully autonomous transducer system, so that it does not need to be integrated into the power- and communications systems of the under-water object to be tracked. Furthermore, the system can transmit signals on at least one preset point in time, whereas in other embodiments, it may only transmit a second signal after receiving a first signal. Some embodiments disclosed may not require bidirectional communication, adding simplicity and keeping the costs low.
Certain embodiments can be deployed with a wide range of offshore equipment. An overview of the many applications follows which, however, is not exhaustive, and anybody skilled in the art shall recognize that the following readily applies to the widest possible variation of deployment modes.
In another aspect, this disclosure is related to geophysical survey methods in which individual non-tethered nodes are deployed, each node can be outfit with a transducer system. When the nodes are deployed from a surface vessel, the surface vessel will not have to stay close until the nodes reach the sea-bed, which can take a substantial amount of time, but can continue to the next deployment points and still track the location of previous nodes. In some embodiments, the nodes can be equipped with a navigation module, which can use a simple propulsion system with or without buoyancy control, which can move the nodes to a desired target location. The navigation module can include a remote acoustic transducer.
In yet another aspect, this disclosure is related to improving the navigation of massive equipment, which is towed with an umbilical by a surface vessel, for example the source dipole in controlled-source electromagnetics. This umbilical can be several miles long in deep water.
In another aspect, this disclosure is related to a transducer system that can be added to existing AUV's, simplifying their tracking over long distances of up to many miles. After enhancement, some tasks for which ROV's are used today, such as inspection of subsea infrastructure including offshore oil and gas production facilities, pipelines or subsea communication or power cables, can be conducted by AUV's, which can be cheaper to operate on account of not being tethered to a surface vessel.
In yet another aspect, this disclosure is related to a near-surface group of acoustic transducers that may be floating at shallow depths under the water surface, with only an RF communication antenna protruding above the surface. Thus, their operation is more feasible in busy offshore industrial sites, where vessel operation permits are challenging to schedule.
In another aspect, this disclosure is related to equipment designed to be rugged, simple, low-maintenance and self-contained, such that it does not require access to power infrastructure or computational bandwidth of the under-water equipment it is designed to track.
Certain embodiments of the present disclosure may be enabled via the presently disclosed underwater tracking technology for objects on or under the water surface. This technology may be typically based on three or more near-surface, or base-, acoustic transducer systems, which can be aligned in a non-linear arrangement, and which can exchange specially designed acoustic pulses with at least one remote transducer system, which can be located a distance of up to about tens of Nautical miles away, and at arbitrary water depths. It is understood that the term transducer system may cover a system with a transmitter and receiver, only a transmitter, or only a receiver, depending on the application.
In another aspect, this disclosure is related to a remote transducer system that can transmit a specially designed acoustic pulse, which may be received by the near-surface transducer systems, where the location of the remote transducer system may be determined through propagation time triangulation and waveform analysis, rendering any sophisticated navigation equipment at the location of the remote transducer system unnecessary.
The acoustic pulses can be encoded such as to prevent misidentification with other under-water equipment present, which also transmits acoustic pulses, and might contain a unique identifier in case multiple remote transducer systems are deployed. It might also be used to transmit low-bandwidth data, which might be sensor data from equipment the remote transducer system is attached to, or receive navigation commands from the base transducer systems, which can be used to steer equipment or objects, to which the remote transducer system is attached, in a direction.
In another aspect, the disclosure is related to a base transducer systems that can be located on or near the water surface, and can be in wired or wireless communication with a manned or unmanned surface craft, which receives the position data of at least one remote transducer system and makes higher-level decisions based on the location of the remote transducer systems. One of the base transducer systems, or a transducer system in a third location, can transmit signals to the remote transducer system in in one-way or two-way communication embodiments.
In another aspect, the disclosure is related to an underwater remote locator device for tracking and position an object. The system can include a remote transducer system, a base transducer system, and a navigation module. The remote transducer system can be coupled to an object desired to be tracked. The remote transducer system can include a power source, processing means, acoustic receiver, and an acoustic transmitter. The acoustic transmitter can be configured to transmit a first acoustic wave in one or more directions. The base transducer system can include a processing means, a a first base transducer having a first acoustic receiver, a second base transducer having a second acoustic receiver, and a third base transducer having a third acoustic receiver. Each acoustic receiver is configured to receive said first acoustic wave from the remote transducer system. In some exemplary embodiments, one or more of the base transducers can further include an acoustic transmitter that can be configured to transmit a second acoustic wave in the direction of said object. The navigation module coupled to the object or remote transducer system. The navigation module can include a propulsion system and a steering system. The navigation module can be communicatively coupled to said remote transducer system. The remote transducer system can be configured to receive the second acoustic wave. The second acoustic wave can contain a first data set. In some exemplary embodiments, the first data set can be encoded navigation commands to be executed by said processing means of the remote transducer system and initiate one or more actions by the propulsion system and steering system.
In another aspect, this disclosure is related to a method to place at least one object dropped from the water surface to a desired location at the water bottom. A first device, second device, third device, forth device, fifth device and at least one object to be tracked can be provided. The first device can include a first acoustic transmitter and a first acoustic receiver, wherein the first device can be coupled to said object. A propulsion system coupled directly to said object or to said first device can be provided. A first acoustic can be transmitted wave in one or more directions using said first acoustic transmitter. The first acoustic wave can be received by a second acoustic receiver on a second device, a third acoustic receiver on a third device, and a fourth acoustic receiver on a said fourth device. A second acoustic wave can be transmitted in the direction of said object by a second transmitter of the fifth device. The second acoustic wave can be received by the first receiver, wherein the second acoustic wave contains first data set. The first data set can include encoded navigation commands.
Before any embodiments of the invention are explained in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangement of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the following drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or of being carried out in various ways. Also, it is to be understood that the phraseology and terminology used herein is for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting. The use of “including,” “comprising,” or “having” and variations thereof herein is meant to encompass the items listed thereafter and equivalents thereof as well as additional items. Unless specified or limited otherwise, the terms “mounted,” “connected,” “supported,” and “coupled” and variations thereof are used broadly and encompass both direct and indirect mountings, connections, supports, and couplings. Further, “connected” and “coupled” are not restricted to physical or mechanical connections or couplings.
The following discussion is presented to enable a person skilled in the art to make and use embodiments of the invention. Various modifications to the illustrated embodiments will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, and the generic principles herein can be applied to other embodiments and applications without departing from embodiments of the invention. Thus, embodiments of the invention are not intended to be limited to embodiments shown, but are to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and features disclosed herein. The following detailed description is to be read with reference to the figures, in which like elements in different figures have like reference numerals. The figures, which are not necessarily to scale, depict selected embodiments and are not intended to limit the scope of embodiments of the invention. Skilled artisans will recognize the examples provided herein have many useful alternatives and fall within the scope of embodiments of the invention.
Embodiments of the present disclosure provide a system and a method for a remote locator device for use in, on, or under water applications, shallow water, deep water, and other fluid pool applications. In order to locate a remote under-water object, the invention does not require any navigation sensors on the remote object itself, but relies solely on a combination of the propagation timing delay and the phase delay in the detection of specially designed acoustic pulses transmitted from the remote under-water object between one or more acoustic receivers. In some exemplary embodiments the acoustic receivers can include three spatially separated and not linearly aligned base acoustic receiver.
A simple system in accordance with the present disclosure can include base transducer systems and may be located on or near the water surface of a water body, with a remote transducer system typically located at a water depth much greater than the base transducer systems. The system can include a plurality of remote transducer systems, which can be deployed in a targeted or random means. The remote transducer(s) can be customized to shallow- and deep-water applications in any body of water. The remote transducer system can be attached to any object to be tracked on or under the water surface. In some exemplary embodiments, an object can include a tethering means, wherein the object acts as a weight to carry the remote transducer system to the bottom surface of the body of water. Other exemplary embodiments can be used without a tethering means. Similarly, the object can be configured to carry the remote transducer system to a targeted depth.
Referring to
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The acoustic pulses in the, typically three or more, base receivers 207a-c can get measured through any means, which converts acoustic waves into a digital representation of the amplitude of the acoustic wave versus time. In some embodiments, this might include a hydrophone, which is based on the piezoelectric conversion of sound into electrical signals. The generated electrical signals can then be converted to digital information through an analog-to-digital converter. Subsequently, the digital information may be preprocessed on each of the base receivers, and then transmitted to a processing unit, followed by an analysis unit—the processing—and analysis units may be wired or wireless communication with the at least three base receiver system 203. In other embodiments, the entire processing might occur on one or more of the base receivers 207a-c, in which case at least one of the base receivers 207 carries at least the processing unit, possibly also the analysis unit. Again, it is understood that the base transducer systems 203 can contain both an acoustic transmitter and receiver in some embodiments, while it can contain only a receiver in other embodiments.
The acoustic pulses in the at least three receivers can also get measured through any means which converts acoustic waves into a different waveform which may get recorded on an analog recording system. In one specific embodiment, the different waveform can be comprised by a time-dependent electric signal, which can get passed through an amplifier stage and then stored on a magnetic tape. In another embodiment, the different waveform may get transmitted through an analog channel to a processing- and analysis units. The channel may be wired or wireless, for example analog radio signals. The base transducer systems can contain both an acoustic transmitter and receiver in some embodiments, while it can contain only a receiver in other embodiments.
In some exemplary embodiments, processing of the signals from the transducers can occur using an approach which is a combination of analog and digital technology. Referring to
The processing unit can perform signal processing. The analysis unit can perform an interpretation or analysis of specially designed wave packets from the base receivers to determine the position of the remote transducer system. The processing and analysis units may center on a CPU (central processing unit), which can be a microcontroller, DSP, GPU, FPGA, or a general-purpose CPU or collection of parallel general-purpose CPU's, such as used in personal computers.
The analysis unit draws conclusions from the position determined of the at least one remote transducer system, and takes higher-level decisions. It can be comprised by a graphical or other output of the data, upon which human beings take the higher-level decisions, or the higher-level decisions can be conducted by a simulated artificial intelligence or other higher-level algorithm. Part of the decision, in either scenario, is to store the location data in non-volatile memory.
It is understood that sound waves are subject to diffraction, associated with a change of direction, when encountering discontinuities. In the ocean, these discontinuities may be due to ocean currents or ocean layers of varying temperature, salinity and pollutants. Further, reflections of the water bottom and water surface will result in multiple signatures of the same pulse at different times, which is complicated by variations in bathymetry. In some embodiments, particularly in offshore industrial sites with a high level of activity, these effects are taken into account by using known ocean conditions and a known background model to conduct a proper data inversion of the received waveforms to determine the true position of the remote transducer system. In other embodiments, the remote transducer system is tracked from relatively close proximity to the base receivers, until it reaches its destination. Thus, by tracking the gradual evolution of the signal pattern, an inversion can be conducted to determine both the position of the remote transducer system versus time, and also a distribution of the ocean water conditions—including salinity and temperature—along the travel path. The latter situation will be more typical for scenarios in less surveyed areas, such as frontier oil and gas exploration.
It is understood that higher frequencies are more attenuated than lower frequencies, and that wave packets centered on a certain point in time with a narrow width Δt0 at their point of origin experience dispersion after traversing some distance, resulting in an increase in their time window Δt1>Δt0. The better localized in time a wave-packet is at its source, the more frequencies it consists of, and the more it will experience dispersion. Hence, the frequency and transmitted waveform is adapted to the application, mainly the required travel time. For longer distances, lower frequencies are required, as well as longer wave-packets in time. Therefore, resolution and bandwidth are sacrificed for longer distances between source transmitter and base receivers.
In some simpler embodiments of the invention, waveforms consisting of a superposition of frequencies will be transmitted by the remote transducer without encoding any additional information. In that case, the position of the remote transmitter will be determined through the relative signal phase and signal amplitude information received in the base transducer systems, which will, in this most simple implementation, only consist of one receiver in each base transducer system. With reference to
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In other embodiments, illustrated in
Referring to
In one example embodiment of the invention, the signal can be scanned and read by the one or more processing units attached to or in communication with the base transducer systems through an appropriate series of filters consisting of at least one digital filter. The at least one digital filter can include a low-pass filter or a down-sampling filter for data reduction, an anti-aliasing filter, as well as at least one filter for frame synchronization. The filter for frame synchronization can include a matched filter appropriate to an instruction set, and a maximum detector to optimize the gain in the analog front. Specific sequences known in the art to be of minimum auto-correlation, such as Barker sequences, can be used to set the time reference for the signal transmission.
In some embodiments, the transmission of signals from the remote transducer system to the base transducer systems can be unidirectional, and is either continuous, or automatically triggered in a predetermined timing pattern. Referring to
In another example embodiment different from the latter, illustrated in
It is understood that the remote transducer system will always contain at least one acoustic transmitter, and, in some embodiments, also at least one acoustic receiver. These can be the same device, or separate devices, and can be controlled by a common processing unit, which can be a microcontroller, DSP, GPU, FPGA, or any CPU. The decoding in the remote receiver can be conducted in a similar way as the decoding in the base transducer systems, or in a different way.
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In some embodiments, the at least one frequency for communication and localization is fixed and selected according to the desired range and resolution, whereas in other embodiments, the at least one frequency is modified according to the position of the at least one remote transducer system. In some exemplary embodiments, the at least one frequency might be selected according to a known water depth profile in a location, or the water depth measured through an appropriate sensor built into or connected to the remote transducer system, whereas in others of the latter embodiments, the at least one frequency is modified in response to commands transmitted from a transmitter near the surface (such as 416 in
In some exemplary embodiments, the frequency of the acoustic carrier wave can be in the range from about 10 Hz to about 10 kHz. In other embodiments, the frequency range will be lower, and can be as low as about 1 Hz, or higher, extending into the about 200 kHz range. In yet other embodiments, any other frequency range might be chosen.
The components of the remote transducer system which do not need to be exposed to the water to ensure their proper functioning may be placed in a separate enclosure, or it may be placed into the enclosure of another piece of under-water equipment, which may be tracked. The enclosure can be designed to sustain sufficiently high pressures to operate in any commercially relevant water depth. In one specific embodiment, the enclosure is designed to a crush depth of up to about 4000 m for ultra-deep water applications, whereas in other embodiments, a lower-cost enclosure is used which is rated to less than about 100 m, or the enclosure might be rated to any other water depth. The transducer system can be designed in a modular fashion so that it can be placed into a different enclosure customized for different water depths and environments.
The remote transducer system can be powered by its own power source located in its own enclosure, or it can be powered by an external power source located on a separate piece of under-water equipment, which the remote transducer system might be tasked to track. Typically, the power source will be a chemical battery, but it can be any suitable power source, which can generate electricity, including a fuel cell, solar cell, or a water turbine or any other power harvesting method. In some embodiments, the remote transducer system may be in wired or close-range wireless communication with a piece of under-water equipment, which it exchanges information with. This information exchanged can include sensor data or operational status information. In other embodiments, it might be only mechanically connected to a piece of under-water equipment or object, which it might be tasked to track, in order to save cost and simplify deployment.
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The system of the present disclosure can provide a low-cost, low-power, and low-bandwidth, real-time navigation solution for subsea objects. The solution is designed to be able to temporarily or permanently retrofit any existing subsea objects. One set of base transducer systems shall be able to communicate with one or more remote transducer systems simultaneously, so that the positions of an entire fleet of subsea objects, such as a number of geophysical nodes, can be determined simultaneously.
To achieve the retrofit capability, the remote transducer system is designed to attach to any subsea objects through the use of a mechanical mounting bracket, mating mechanical connectors, magnetic mounting, or a combination of mechanical and magnetic methods. In other embodiments, a mechanical fixture may be installed to facilitate the application of disposable mounting solutions, such as plastic cable ties. The subsea objects can include geophysical nodes, such as ocean bottom seismic nodes, electromagnetic loggers for controlled-source electromagnetic or magneto-telluric surveys; geochemical nodes for environmental surveys or chemical trace detection of hydrocarbon or other mineral deposits; autonomous underwater vehicles; any other piece of offshore equipment which presently operates without a live bidirectional communication link, and which would benefit from transmitting its position to a central location.
Referring to
In one exemplary embodiment, a navigation module can be used to guide the object to be tracked into position. The navigation module can include a propulsion system and can be generally buoyant or coupled to a buoyant object. The propulsion system can then be coupled to an object to be tracked, or to the navigation module, which can in turn be coupled to an object to be tracked. The propulsion system can include a weighted apparatus to overcome the combined buoyancy of the object, propulsion system and transducer system and allow it to descend into the water. The weighted apparatus can be any suitable means, including a concrete weight configured to dissolve over a period of time. The weighted system can be releasably coupled in a manner where a simple disconnect to release the object(s) to be tracked from the weight can be triggered by an acoustic pulse sent to the remote transducer system, which is in communication with the releasable coupling. This weighted system can be a separate modular system, or it can be incorporated into the propulsion system. In some embodiments, the propulsion system and remote transducer system can remain coupled to, and be retrieved concurrently with, the object(s) to be tracked, and in other embodiments, the propulsion system and remote transducer system can be retrieved separately from the object(s) to be tracked.
In all of the objects to be tracked mentioned, the at least one remote transducer system mentioned exchanges specially designed pulses with the base transducer array, from which the location (geographic coordinates and water depth), as well as potentially other information encoded in the same or other pulses, can be interpreted.
In some embodiments, the base transducer array can be in wired or wireless communication with a manned or unmanned craft, which can be an offshore vessel from which operational decisions are made by a human crew or an artificial intelligence, or a predetermined computer algorithm. In other embodiments, communication with a control center can be conducted through one or a series of relay communication stations, which can include seaborne, airborne, satellite-based or land-based systems. From the control center, operational decisions based on position tracking of at least one remote transducer system may be made by a human crew or an artificial intelligence, or a predetermined computer algorithm.
Referring to
An embodiment employing two-way communication is shown in
The system shown in
An incident acoustic wave 1530 can register in the acoustic receiver 1503, which can convert the wave to a time-dependent voltage signal. The electric signal can pass through an analog bandpass filter stage 1505, which removes any frequency components which are known not to be part of the desired signal transmitted from a base transducer system, resulting in second filtered signals. Second filtered signal can be passed through an adjustable gain amplifier stage 1506, which converts the second filtered signals in magnitude to a time-dependent voltage which can be conveniently measured by electronic measurement systems, resulting in a second amplified signal. The second amplified signal can be passed on to an analog-to-digital converter 1507, which can convert the second amplified signal into a digital signal representation.
An ADC converter 1507 can pass the digital representation of the signal to a CPU 1519. In some embodiments, the ADC converter 1507 is already integrated in the CPU 1519. Within the CPU, the digital representation of the signal is passed through a digital filter stage 1508, which performs other operations, such as anti-alias filtering or removing artifacts introduced by electronic systems such as the amplifier 1506, and which can produce a third filtered signal, which can be passed to a bit decoding system 1509, which can interpret the third filtered signal as sequences of binary data. The sequences of binary data may be passed to a synchronization system 1510, which can scan the bit sequence for the beginning of encoded commands in the bit system. The commands can be interpreted by a system 1511, which reads and interprets the instructions, and can pass the instructions on to a higher-level programming system 1514, which may be a set of hardware instructions, software programming, an operating system, algorithms, artificial intelligence, or a combination thereof.
The higher-level programming system 1514 may respond to instructions received from the system 1511, and may also have access to data memory 1512, program memory 1513 and ROM (read-only-memory) 1518. Data memory 1512 may be volatile memory, or non-volatile memory, or a combination of both. Data memory 1512 may receive information from the object 1501 through a data bus. A data bus may be through wired or wireless communication channels. Examples for wired channels can include Ethernet, USB, UART, SPI, I2C, or any proprietary system. Examples for wireless channels feasible in a subsea environment can include acoustic modems, low, or extremely low-frequency RF communications.
The higher-level programming unit 1514 may initiate instructions to a navigation module that can have propulsion system 1524 or a rudder system 1525 or instructions initiating the transmission of acoustic pulses through an acoustic transmitter 1504. The instructions may be issued based on instructions read from the incoming data through 1511, or they may be issued based on other events or schedules or other sensor data from within the remote transducer system or information received through the data bus 1527, determined by internal programming in the higher-level programming unit 1514.
The higher-level programming unit 1514 may initiate instructions to the propulsion system 1524 or the rudder system 1525. The instructions may be passed to a motor control unit 1521, which sends control signals to a load driver 1522, which may initiate electric motors or other electric actuators to drive an electric propulsion system or rudder system, which may be represented by 1524 and 1525.
Furthermore, the higher-level programming system 1514 may send instructions to a waveform generator 1515 to assemble a localization pulse, which may send data to a digital-to-analog converter 1516. The DAC converter 1516 may output the localization pulse as a time-dependent, low-power voltage signal versus time, and may pass the low-power voltage signal to a power amplifier 1517, which can excite an acoustic transmitter 1504, which can transmit a time-dependent acoustic waveform 1540 into the water, to be detected in multiple acoustic receivers in a base transducer system. In some exemplary embodiments of the invention, the DAC converter 1516 may be part of the CPU system 1519, whereas in other embodiments, the waveform generator 1515 may be outside the CPU system 1519.
Additionally, the higher-level programming system 1514 may instruct a message assembler 1519 to generate a message containing a system identifier of the specific remote transducer system, information from the data bus 1527, or other sensor or status data from within the enclosure 1520. The message assembler 1519 passes the messages to an encoder 1519, which converts the messages into low-power time-dependent voltage signals. The low-power voltage signals may be passed to a power amplifier, which can excite an acoustic transmitter 1504, which can transmit a time-dependent acoustic waveform 1540 into the water, to be detected in at least one acoustic receivers in a base transducer system. In some embodiments of the invention, the encoder 1520 may comprise part of the CPU system 1519.
The CPU 1519 may be any computer system able to execute a program and addressing memory, and may contain at least one, or a combination of multiple devices such as microcontrollers, DSPs, FPGAs, graphical processing units, or general-purpose processors such as used in personal computers. The CPU may also contain specialized integrated circuits, including but not limited to decode and/or encode and transmit information through a data bus interface. Any of the systems 1508, 1509, 1510, 1511, 1515, 1519 and 1521 may be such an integrated circuit, or a combination of multiple integrated circuits and other discrete electronic components comprising an electronic circuit.
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It may not be known prior to receiving whether the incident wave 1617 contains a localization pulse or an encoded digital pulse, or a combination of both. Hence, the digital signal representations can be transmitted to a control system 1619 through data bus systems 1607a, 1607b and 1607c. The data bus systems may be wired or wireless channels. Examples for wireless channels can include any short-range or long-range radio communications, including WiFi, cellular networks, ZigBee, Z-Wave or any proprietary RF protocol or any other suitable communication method. Similarly, examples for wired channels include Ethernet, USB, UART, SPI, I2C, or any proprietary system or other suitable system.
Digital signal representations may be received by a CPU 1608 in the control system 1619, which may perform additional digital filtering of the signal and determines whether the signal is a localization pulse or an encoded pulse. In the case of a localization pulse, the CPU 1608 may analyze the position of the remote transducer system based on the combination of digital representations of the pulses received by the acoustic receivers 1601a, 1601b and 1601c. In the case of an encoded pulse, it may decode and analyze the information encoded from at least one of the acoustic receivers 1601a, 1601b and 1601c. The CPU 1608 may store the digital signal representations, or information obtained through higher-level processing, onto memory 1609. The CPU 1608 may also, through a user interface 1610, communicate to a human user information such as the position of at least one remote transducer system, or other information, such as an identifier, sensor information or the status of a remote transducer system or an object it is tasked to track. The communication may be communicated to a user through displaying graphics, or text, or numbers, through any systems known in the art, such as graphics displays. The CPU 1608 may also, through the user interface 1610, solicit input from a human user, for example through a graphical user interface or a text-based user interface. The input may include or initiate commands transmitted to a remote transducer system, such as navigation commands. Such input may be accomplished by any number of systems, including at least one touch screen, mouse, keyboard or any other data input system known in the art.
The CPU 1608 may be any computer system able to execute a program and addressing memory, and may contain at least one, or a combination of multiple devices such as microcontrollers, DSPs, FPGAs, graphical processing units, or general-purpose processors such as used in personal computers. The CPU may also contain specialized integrated circuits, including but not limited to decode and/or encode and transmit information through a data bus interface or through a user interface, or controlling non-volatile memory 1609. In some embodiments, any of the ADC converters 1605a/b/c, adjustable gain amplifiers 1604a/b/c or analog bandpass filters 1603a/b/c may be located inside the control system 1619 and be integrated, or directly connected with, the CPU 1608.
Additionally, the CPU 1608 may instruct a command assembler 1612 to initiate transmission of a command through a data bus 1611 to an encoder system 1614. In some embodiments, the command assembler 1612 may comprise part of the CPU 1608. The data bus 1611 may be any wired or wireless system, in the same manner as in data bus 1607a, b, c. The encoder system 1614 is located inside a water-tight enclosure 1613, which may be partially or completely submerged. The encoder system converts the digital representation of a command to be transmitted into a time-dependent voltage signal. The time-dependent voltage signal may be passed to a power amplifier 1615, which excites an acoustic transmitter 1616, which can transmit a time-dependent acoustic waveform into the water, to be detected in at least one remote transducer system.
In some embodiments of the invention, any of the encoder system 1614 or power amplifier 1615 may comprise part of the control system 1619, and the encoder system 1614 may be part of, or be directly connected to, CPU 1608. Similarly, in some exemplary embodiments, the acoustic transmitter 1616 may be located inside the same enclosure as any of the receivers 1601a, b, c. In a subset of such embodiments, the acoustic transmitter 1616 may comprise the same transducer as one of the receivers 1601a, b, c.
An underwater remote locator device for tracking and positioning an object of the present disclosure can include a remote transducer system, a base transducer system, and a navigation module. The remote transducer system can be coupled to an object desired to be tracked. The remote transducer system can include a power source, processing means, acoustic receiver, and an acoustic transmitter. The acoustic transmitter can be configured to transmit a first acoustic wave in one or more directions. The base transducer system can include a processing means, a first base transducer having a first acoustic receiver, a second base transducer having a second acoustic receiver, and a third base transducer having a third acoustic receiver. Each acoustic receiver can be configured to receive said first acoustic wave from the remote transducer system.
In some exemplary embodiments, one or more of the base transducers can further include an acoustic transmitter that can be configured to transmit a second acoustic wave in the direction of said object. The navigation module coupled to the object or remote transducer system. The navigation module can include a propulsion system and a steering system. The navigation module can be communicatively coupled to the remote transducer system. The remote transducer system can be configured to receive the second acoustic wave. The second acoustic wave can contain a first data set. In some exemplary embodiments, the first data set can be encoded navigation commands to be executed by said processing means of the remote transducer system and initiate one or more actions by the propulsion system and steering system. Similarly, the navigation module can be couple to the remote transducer system, or alternatively directly to the object to be tracked. The navigation module comprises a transducer and said rudder system and said propulsion system are oriented in two directions in the plane substantially perpendicular to the direction of gravity.
A first acoustic wave can be transmitted in one or more directions using said acoustic transmitter. The first acoustic wave can be received by the first acoustic receiver of the base transducer system. A second acoustic wave can be transmitted in the direction of said base transducer system by the remote transducer system. The second acoustic wave can be received by the receiver of the base transducer system. The second acoustic wave contains first data set.
In one exemplary embodiment, a first receiver can be positioned in a first location at a first pre-select time, a second location at a second pre-select time, and a third location at a third preselect time. Each location can be different from the other. In some exemplary embodiments, the locations will form a geometric shape and not exist in a straight line. The first receiver can be configured to receive said first acoustic waves in each of the first, second, and third locations, at the corresponding times.
The remote transducer system can be configured to be coupled to an object. The first data set can contain navigation commands based on the present position of the object as determined from said first acoustic wave compared with a preselected target position. The first acoustic wave can be repeated and said navigation commands can be updated and retransmitted until said object has landed on said preselected target position using a control algorithm. The base transducer system can transmit and receive a third data set from a vessel communication system. The third data set can be sent to and from the vessel communication system. The vessel communication system can include a processing unit, receiver, and transmitter, wherein said processing unit is capable of displaying, storing, or analysis of said third data set.
The present disclosure can also provide method to place at least one object dropped from the water surface to a desired location at the water bottom. A first device, second device, third device, forth device, fifth device and at least one object to be tracked can be provided. The first device can include a first acoustic transmitter and a first acoustic receiver, wherein the first device can be coupled to said object. The object to be tracked can include one or more geophysical notes, such as such as ocean-bottom seismic nodes, electromagnetic nodes, or collection devices. The electromagnetic nodes can collect data for controlled-source electromagnetic or magnetotelluric surveys and the collection devices take soil samples for immediate or later chemical analysis.
A propulsion system coupled directly to said object or to said first device can be provided. A first acoustic can be transmitted wave in one or more directions using said first acoustic transmitter. The first acoustic wave can be received by a second acoustic receiver on a second device, a third acoustic receiver on a third device, and a fourth acoustic receiver on a said fourth device. A second acoustic wave can be transmitted in the direction of said object by a second transmitter of the fifth device. The second acoustic wave can be received by the first receiver, wherein the second acoustic wave contains first data set. The first data set can include encoded navigation commands.
The first acoustic wave and second acoustic wave can each have an amplitude, frequency distribution, or time distribution. Each amplitude, frequency distribution, or time distribution of said first acoustic wave or said second acoustic wave can be continuously adjusted depending on various factors. The conditions can include but are not limited to the depth of said first device under the water, environmental conditions, density of said water, water layers of different temperatures, pollution of said water, or the distance of said first device to any combination of said second or third or fourth device.
Additionally, the first acoustic wave receive by the one or devices, such as a transducers or the second, third, and fourth device, can be a wave packet with a time dependence and frequency distribution. The wave packet can be converted into electronic signals by the second, or third or fourth device. The signals or times at which the signals are received by each of said second device, third device and fourth device can be used to determine the spatial position of said first device based on the difference of one or more phases, wave form shapes, or combination phases and wave from shapes of one or more of said signals received by each of said second device, third device, and fourth device.
The transmitter of the first device can transmit a third acoustic wave that can have an amplitude, frequency spectrum, or time distribution that can be continuously adjusted to the position of said second device, third device, or fourth device. A second data set can be incorporated in said third acoustic wave, which can be received by the second receiver on the second device, third receiver on the third device, or the fourth receiver on the fourth device. The second, or third or fourth device can decode the second data set incorporated in said third acoustic wave.
Additionally, in one exemplary embodiment, the second or third or fourth device can transmit and receive a third data set with a sixth device. The third data set can be exchanged with the sixth device. The sixth device can include a processing unit and is located on a vessel. The processing unit is capable of conducting display or storage or analysis of said third data set.
The sixth device can transmit and receive a fourth data set with the fifth device. The fifth device can be located proximate to the water surface and communicatively coupled to said vessel. The fifth device can convert the fourth data set into said first data set. The first data set can be suitable for transmission through said second transmitter in a direction to said first device. The first data set can contain navigation commands based on the present position of the object as determined from the first acoustic wave compared with a desired target position. The first acoustic wave can be repeated and said navigation commands can be updated and retransmitted until said object has landed on said target position using a control algorithm.
A plurality of objects can be deployed simultaneously and the second, third and fourth devices can receive at least the first acoustic wave and at least the third acoustic wave with encoded unique identifier for each of said objects. A fifth device can transmit navigation commands to different objects by encoding said unique identifier in said second acoustic wave, thus controlling multiple said objects simultaneously.
Conditional language used herein, such as, among others, “can,” “might,” “may,” “e.g.,” and the like, unless specifically stated otherwise, or otherwise understood within the context as used, is generally intended to convey that certain embodiments include, while other embodiments do not include, certain features, elements and/or states. Thus, such conditional language is not generally intended to imply that features, elements and/or states are in any way required for one or more embodiments or that one or more embodiments necessarily include logic for deciding whether these features, elements and/or states are included or are to be performed in any particular embodiment. The terms “comprising,” “including,” “having,” and the like are synonymous and are used inclusively, in an open-ended fashion, and do not exclude additional elements, features, acts, operations, and so forth. Also, the term “or” is used in its inclusive sense (and not in its exclusive sense) so that when used, for example, to connect a list of elements, the term “or” means one, some, or all of the elements in the list.
While the above detailed description has shown, described, and pointed out novel features as applied to various embodiments, it will be understood that various omissions, substitutions, and changes in the form and details of the devices or algorithms illustrated can be made without departing from the spirit of the disclosure. As will be recognized, certain embodiments of the inventions described herein can be embodied within a form that does not provide all of the features and benefits set forth herein, as some features can be used or practiced separately from others. The scope of certain inventions disclosed herein is indicated by the appended claims rather than by the foregoing description. All changes which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are to be embraced within their scope.
This patent application claims priority to U.S. Provisional 62/557,154 filed Sep. 12, 2017, and U.S. Provisional 62/557,156 filed Sep. 12, 2017 the disclosures of which are considered part of the disclosure of this application and is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US18/50777 | 9/12/2018 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62557154 | Sep 2017 | US | |
62557156 | Sep 2017 | US |