| Literature DB >> 35795086 |
Søren Rysgaard1,2,3,4, Kim Bjerge1,5, Wieter Boone1,6, Egon Frandsen1,2, Michael Graversen7, Toke Thomas Høye1,8, Bjarne Jensen1,9, Geoffrey Johnen6, Marcin Antoni Jackowicz-Korczynski1,8,10, Jeffrey Taylor Kerby1,11, Simon Kortegaard12, Mikhail Mastepanov1,8,13, Claus Melvad1,14, Peter Schmidt Mikkelsen1,2, Keld Mortensen1,9, Carsten Nørgaard7, Ebbe Poulsen1,2, Tenna Riis1,2, Lotte Sørensen1,9, Torben Røjle Christensen1,8,13.
Abstract
Climate change is rapidly altering the Arctic environment. Although long-term environmental observations have been made at a few locations in the Arctic, the incomplete coverage from ground stations is a main limitation to observations in these remote areas. Here we present a wind and sun powered multi-purpose mobile observatory (ARC-MO) that enables near real time measurements of air, ice, land, rivers, and marine parameters in remote off-grid areas. Two test units were constructed and placed in Northeast Greenland where they have collected data from cabled and wireless instruments deployed in the environment since late summer 2021. The two units can communicate locally via WiFi (units placed 25 km apart) and transmit near-real time data globally over satellite. Data are streamed live and accessible from (https://gios.org). The cost of one mobile observatory unit is c. 304.000€. These test units demonstrate the possibility for integrative and automated environmental data collection in remote coastal areas and could serve as models for a proposed global observatory system.Entities:
Keywords: Arctic; Autonomous; Environment; Near-real time; Observatory; Remote
Year: 2022 PMID: 35795086 PMCID: PMC9251812 DOI: 10.1016/j.ohx.2022.e00331
Source DB: PubMed Journal: HardwareX ISSN: 2468-0672
Desired product requirements and their status in the final technical specifications.
| Product requirements | Achieved? | |
|---|---|---|
| Deployment | From helicopter and small vessel | yes |
| Handling | 2–3 people | yes |
| Operation | 1–2 years | not fully tested |
| Shipping | 6-foot insulated aluminium container | yes |
| Air temperature | −35 to 40 °C | yes |
| Water temperature | −2 to 20 °C | yes |
| Dimensions | 6 foot containers covered by 4 solar panels and windmill | yes |
| Weight | < 1200 kg per unit | yes |
| Atmosphere and land unit | up to 2000 Wh per day | yes |
| Atmosphere and marine unit | up to 1200 Wh per day | yes |
| Battery bank | > 30 kWh. Capacity to sustain the entire system for 12–18 days without charging. | yes |
| Atmosphere | Air and skin temperature | yes |
| Land | Air temperature | yes |
| Limnic | Water temperature | Fully implemented in 2022 |
| Ocean | Ice keel (sea ice thickness) | yes |
| Data storage | All data collected are stored on local server | yes |
| Cable | Data from the marine sensors are transmitted by inductive link and 4 mm steel cable to the server in the container with a distance up to 1–2 km. | yes |
| WiFi | Data from the field (land and limnic) is transmitted via WiFi to the server in the container | yes |
| WiFi connection between units (ca 25 km) | yes | |
| Satellite telemetry | Average data (hourly) is transmitted (by FTP) once a day | yes |
Fig. 1Marine container unit in the outer part of Young Sound (left) and terrestrial container unit inside the fjord near the Zackenberg Research Station (right) in NE Greenland (74°N). The marine unit collects data from the meteorological mast in the background and from the fjord ca 1 km off the coast. The terrestrial container collects data from the meteorological mast in the foreground and from various installations in the landscape.
Fig. 2Test site in NE Greenland (Inserted lower left). Red circle is enclosing the Young Sound-Tyrolerfjord system and the Zackenberg/Daneborg research stations. Operational concept of ARC-MO consisting of (1) container units with solar panels, windmill and transmitting systems (2) meteorology masts (3) cabled subsea instruments (4) various instruments on land and lakes e.g. cameras, thermistors, gas flux systems, runoff sensors and (5) satellite communication. The ARC-MO units are also able to communicate with each other through WiFi over 25 km. (For interpretation of the references to colour in this figure legend, the reader is referred to the web version of this article.)
Fig. 3The inner part of an empty container (left). Inlets on the rear of the container (right).
Fig. 4Solar panels and a wind turbine mounted on a container (at test site in Denmark).
Fig. 5Battery cage open (left) and closed for transport with helicopter (right).
Fig. 6Monthly power consumption (kWh) in two different container systems.
Fig. 7Wiring diagram of the power supply system.
Fig. 8Atmospheric instruments in the 6 m mast.
Fig. 9Terrestrial container eddy covariance system with meteorological sensers installed on tripod.
Fig. 10Terrestrial automatic chamber setup being tested for winter operation in Northeast Finland before deployment in Greenland.
Fig. 11Terrestrial camera systems.
Fig. 12The camera system.
Fig. 13Ocean cable observatory.
Fig. 14(Left) Digging a trench to protect the sub-sea cable from ice scour and disturbance at the shoreline. A channel was dug during lowest neap tide. (Right) installation of the inductive cable to the mooring position (1 km off coast) and deployment of the mooring with a small support vessel.
Fig. 15Data acquisition and satellite system.
Fig. 16The diagram of the data flow from FTP server to Grafana dashboard.
Fig. 17Grafana dashboard example with indication displaying information of the container at Daneborg in NE Greenland.
Fig. 18Price overview of ARC-MO showing the cost of the central hub, atmospheric, land and ocean instruments.
Fig. 19Overall view of the ARC-MO schematic design of system.
Fig. 20Connecting to the ARC-MO via Bluetooth.
| Hardware name | ARC-MO (Arctic Research Centre – Mobile Observatory) |
| Subject area | Environmental, planetary and agricultural sciences |
| Hardware type | Field measurements and sensors |
| Closest commercial analog | No commercial analog is available |
| Open source license | CC BY 4.0 |
| Cost of hardware | |
| Source file repository |
| Design file name | File type | Open source license | Location of the file |
|---|---|---|---|
| BOM.xlsx | Excel | Contains detailed costs of materials | |
| 1.01_container_setup | Contains information on the container unit | ||
| 1.02_communication | Contains information on the WiFy and satellite communication | ||
| 1.03_power | Contains information on the power and battery system | ||
| 2.01_meteorology | Contains information on the meteorology mast and sensors | ||
| 3.01_soil | Contains information on the soil sensors | ||
| 3.02_precipitation | Contains information on precipitation (rain and snow) gauges | ||
| 3.03_fluxes | Contains information eddy and chamber flux systems | ||
| 3.04_photos | Contains information on time lapse camera systems | ||
| 4.01_sensor array | Contains information on limnic sensor systems | ||
| 5.01_cable observatory | Contains information on ocean cabled sensor systems |
| Designator | Component | Number | Cost per unit - EUR | Total cost -EUR |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.01 | Container | 1 | 5.766 € | 5.766 € |
| 1.02 | Communication | 1 | 5.515 € | 5.515 € |
| 1.03 | Power | 1 | 15.025 € | 15.025 € |
| 2.01 | Meteorology | 1 | 121.983 € | 121.983 € |
| 3.01 | Land, soil | 1 | 3.938 € | 3.938 € |
| 3.02 | Land, precipitation | 1 | 1.267 € | 1.267 € |
| 3.03 | Land, fluxes | 1 | 34.567 € | 34.567 € |
| 3.04 | Land, camera system | 1 | 8.203 € | 8.203 € |
| 4.01 | Limnic observations | 1 | 19.080 € | 19.080 € |
| 5.01 | Ocean cabled observatory | 1 | 88.532 € | 88.532 € |
| Total | 303.877€ | 303.877€ |