Overview News Events Retransmission Contact Us Help
      Learn How to Watch ResearchChannel  
ResearchChannel News

First-Ever Live HD Images from Seafloor to Land Available as IP-Based Feed

Offshore, NE Pacific Ocean, September 28, 2005 -
For the first time, live high-definition images of active thermal vents on the ocean floor were available as an IP-based feed Sept. 27 from 2-3:45 p.m. PT. Weather permitting, live images will be available again Sept. 28 and 29 from 10 a.m.-6 p.m. PT.

This feed came directly from the ocean floor by way of the research vessel Thomas G. Thompson. The ship is on site at a research expedition of the Juan de Fuca Ridge in the Northeast Pacific Ocean, 200 miles off the Washington-British Columbia coast. This unprecedented live, HD video broadcast from what has been described as the “Yellowstone of the deep sea” epitomizes the next generation of research ? in which data and images collected by scientific instruments are immediately available across Internet networks. Direct observation of giant earthquakes, cavorting marine mammals, erupting volcanoes, massive landslides, brilliant blooms of microscopic life-forms and a host of equally fascinating processes, creatures and phenomena can be brought into laboratories, classrooms and living rooms by way of the Internet. These images were available over the Internet in HD multicast to selected research groups and sites in six countries capable of handling the high-bandwidth Internet data.

“This 20Mbps MPEG2 HD video stream is definitely the most-capable imaging medium in existence for viewing and sharing the unparalleled deep seascapes festooned with luxuriant and exotic life-forms that thrive on volcanic activity while living in the shadow of death from scorching 700°F vent fluids billowing out of the seafloor centimeters away,” stated University of Washington professor of Oceanography John Delaney and co-leader of the expedition with UW professor Deborah Kelley.

The expedition uses three HD cameras located on the seafloor, on the ship and on land in a classroom setting. Internet multicast viewers felt as if they were present on the VISIONS ’05 Research Expedition: They experienced live underwater images and narration by scientists at sea, on the ship and on land in real time.

This IP-based feed is an important step in transforming the way research is conducted. As Delaney said, “It is the result of an exciting collaboration with resources from ResearchChannel, the Nationa Science Foundation and the W.M. Keck Foundation. We could not have done this type of program with HD via satellite even two years ago.” He continued, “This program is emblematic of the rapid and nonlinear changes in both scientific insights and technology-based capabilities that are literally transforming our perceptions and interactions with ocean space.”

These transmissions were also broadcast in standard definition on ResearchChannel Sept. 27, giving the public access to incredible, first-ever live video images of the Juan de Fuca Ridge. Weather permitting, additional live standard-definition transmissions are scheduled to air on ResearchChanne Sept. 28 and 29 from 10 a.m.-6 p.m. PT and can be seen as live webcasts at www.researchchannel.org/visions05.

Partners in this effort are the National Science Foundation, the UW College of Ocean and Fishery Sciences and School of Oceanography, UWTV, ResearchChannel, NOAA, NEPTUNE Canada, Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Pacific Northwest Gigapop, PacificWave and CANARIE, Canada’s advanced Internet development organization.


About VISIONS ’05
ResearchChanne www.researchchannel.org 1-877-616-7265 info@researchchannel.org VISIONS ’05 exemplifies the transformation that is underway in the field of oceanography. VISIONS ’05 — which stands for Visually Integrated Science for Interactive Ocean Networked Systems -- is a fiveweek multidisciplinary research expedition to the underwater volcanoes of the northeast Pacific on the University of Washington Research Vessel Thomas G. Thompson. A total of 55 scientists from the United States and Canada are onboard for this expedition. K-12 science teachers from throughout the U.S. are contributing to the research as part of the REVEL Project: Research and Education: Volcanoes, Exploration, Life.

About ResearchChannel
ResearchChannel links a growing global audience to the revolutionary developments, insights and discoveries of leading research and academic institutions through online, on-air and on-demand video distribution formats. Founded as a way to share breakthrough research with the public, the ResearchChannel consortium includes world-renowned universities and research institutions. Video programming ranging from technology and science innovations to fascinating arts and humanities topics is shared in its original form and without interruption.

About the UW School of Oceanography
The School of Oceanography, part of the College of Ocean and Fisheries Sciences at the University of Washington, explores the world and its complex ecological systems. The School seeks to understand those processes which shape our oceans by understanding a much broader set of intellectual horizons. The School attracts a rich variety of individuals, yet builds a close community of students and faculty. Our research and education opportunities will attract theoreticians, problem solvers, computer specialists, field enthusiasts and those with a passion for learning.

About NEPTUNE
The NEPTUNE is an ocean observatory effort that is building an extensive network of experimental sites. These sites are connected to and powered by 2,000 miles of fiber-optic/power cable on the Juan de Fuca tectonic plate. NEPTUNE technology represents the next generation of ocean research and will provide continuous remote access to the extreme environments found on the seafloor. Once completed, the NEPTUNE fiber-optic/power cable network will make it possible to transmit real-time images of threedimensiona ocean and seafloor environments both to shore and over the Internet.

###

Contact: Dana Martin
(206) 543-8907

 

 
News Archive
 

1/22-26/06 21st Annual APAN Meeting Tokyo, Japan

2/15-17/06 WebWise 2006 Los Angeles, CA

3/26-28/06 PRAGMA 10 Townsville, Australia

More Events
 
Home | About ResearchChannel | Retransmission | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Contact Us

Copyright © 2008 ResearchChannel. All Rights Reserved.