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Very powerful, very deep sea exploration


Constance

Paranormal Adept
THE world's oceans are big, dark and full of mystery. How to unlock the secrets of the deep? With the SeaOrbiter - a gigantic, solar-powered, floating aquatic observation vessel that will scour the seas non-stop for new life and sunken civilisations.
It might look like something out of a James Cameron dream but this 190ft tall floating behemoth is taking to open water as the world's first non-stop exploration vessel, complete with submarine drones, underwater living quarters and space training simulator.
Oceanographer Jacques Rougerie is the mastermind behind the SeaOrbiter - a creation he's been designing for over a decade - and secured the final 30 per cent of the A$53 million build cost from crowdfunding site KissKissBankBank.
Constantly roaming the oceans and with over half of the 190ft ship under the water's surface the SeaOrbiter offers an alternative exploration proposition to current research projects. Missions have been mapped out when it sets sail to get an in-depth look at seabeds, search for lost civilisations, find mythical deep sea creatures and find new life forms.
With 90 per cent of the world's oceans still unexplored it's estimated that there are millions more species not yet recorded or observed and Rougerie aims to scan the planet's abysses to find them.
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A plan of the SeaOrbiter. Sun lounge deck nowhere to be found. Source: SeaOrbiter Source: Supplied
So if you're going to discover new forms of life, why not do it in style. This mega craft looks to blow all other research vessels out the water being decked out in some high-tech tech kit including being built from Sealium - a recyclable aluminium designed for marine environments - and powered through a 'solar skin' which will let it sail in silence.
On-board there's a hive of high-tech devices from which large numbers of subsea exploration devices leave daily like sub-aquatic bees to gather data and return at the end of each trip.
With ten accommodation levels there is room for 22 permanent inhabitants, including four above the water for sea bird and surface observation and six decks below the water that will let residents continuously peek out into the big blue. Pressurised hyperbaric quarters are also found below, which are intended to save deep sea divers the bother of having to go through the decompression process.
Work will begin later this year and when fully operational it will spend its time scanning the Mediterranean. There are plans to eventually have a fleet of floating SeaOrbiters. Watch out Nessie!
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Aquanauts and robotic submarines will be able to freely go to and from the vessel as part of uninterrupted research. Source: SeaOrbiter Source: Supplied
SeaOrbiter specs:
• Solar powered and can roam the seas in silence
• Wind turbine for extra power
• 190ft high (100ft below water)
• On-board laboratory
• Ten accommodation levels (four above, six below water level) for 22 permanent residents
• Hyperbaric laboratory to carry out unrestricted dives at depths of between 10m and 100m without the inconvenience of decompression stops. Aquanauts stay in a pressurised chamber which keeps them at the same pressure as the surrounding underwater environment. They can then stay on extended dives among the marine creatures, especially during the night, a critical period when unknown animals rise to the surface from the deep.
• Remote-operated underwater vehicle which can film and take samples up to 1000m
• Has an autonomous drone submarine that will plunge to 6000m
• Has an on-board space simulator thanks that mimics the conditions in space so astronauts can train for future expeditions including preparations for Mars

SeaOrbiter is the world's first non-stop research vessel hoping to find Atlantis | Technology & Auto Design News | News.com.au#
 
Han? Are you there? You've got to see this. :D

Looks awesome. I couldn't work on it, though, because of my fear of depths. But I sure hope it's going to be realized and successful, not only because of it's sci-fi looks.
 
:) My first thought is that it looks expensive, very expensive.
I don't see the need for a "manned" craft, in fact the life support requirements of a crew complicate things so much that: I believe that "ROV/S"* are the way forward.

*Remotely Operated Vehicle or Submersible.
 
I think it makes a lot more sense to sink ;) research money into oceanic research than interstellar research for a number of reasons especially in regards to the possible future of mankind. we KNOW there's untapped potential in regards to other species, another source of food/farming and possible living whereas outer space seems to be a bit of a crapshoot. If we could just get a better grasp of the concept of good governance.

@Polterwurst re:your fear of depths, just think of it as height but in the other direction.
 
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