Published on: Saturday, January 16, 2021
By: Agencies
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The Baruna Jaya IV research vessel deployed a Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV) to locate the cockpit voice recorder of the ill-fated flight.
JAKARTA: Research vessel Baruna Jaya has detected the suspected location of the crashed Sriwijaya Air flight SJ-182’s cockpit voice recorder (CVR), officials informed on Thursday.
Chief of the Agency for Assessment and Application of Technology (BPPT), Hammam Riza, said the agency’s Baruna Jaya IV is still at the crash site and is continuing to search for the CVR, which is part of the black box flight recorder.
“The search for the CVR is still ongoing using an undersea robot which is commonly called Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV),” he said in a press statement released on Thursday.
Published on: Saturday, January 16, 2021
By: Agencies
Text Size:
The Baruna Jaya IV research vessel deployed a Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV) to locate the cockpit voice recorder of the ill-fated flight.
JAKARTA: Research vessel Baruna Jaya has detected the suspected location of the crashed Sriwijaya Air flight SJ-182’s cockpit voice recorder (CVR), officials informed on Thursday.
Chief of the Agency for Assessment and Application of Technology (BPPT), Hammam Riza, said the agency’s Baruna Jaya IV is still at the crash site and is continuing to search for the CVR, which is part of the black box flight recorder.
“The search for the CVR is still ongoing using an undersea robot which is commonly called Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV),” he said in a press statement released on Thursday.
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13 January 2021
By: Elizabeth Van Wye
Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV) Jason, designed, built, and operated by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution for exploring the ocean depths. COURTESY PHOTO
As anyone who has attempted to recover their lost sunglasses after they fell off a boat can attest, even clean ocean water is impenetrable beyond a few inches. Over the past decades, dramatic improvements in our ability to explore the ocean depths have taken place and yet there is still so much to be learned about the ocean, whose well-being is critical to our global ecosystem.
More than 80 people were online Thursday evening to hear Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute (WHOI) scientist and engineer Andy Bowen discuss the increasing sophistication of ocean exploration for the first program in Chatham Marconi Maritime Center s 2021 Speaker Series.