HomeTechnologyAutomation and RoboticsFirst Autonomous Ship Prepares for Maiden Voyage

    First Autonomous Ship Prepares for Maiden Voyage

    The “Mayflower 400″—the world’s first intelligent ship—bobs gently in a light swell as it stops its engines in Plymouth Sound, off England’s southwest coast, before self-activating a hydrophone designed to listen to whales.

    The 50-foot (15-meter) trimaran, which weighs nine tonnes and completely autonomous navigation, is preparing for a transatlantic voyage.

    On its journey, the vessel, covered in solar panels, will study marine pollution and analyze plastic in the water, as well as track aquatic mammals.

    Eighty percent of the underwater world remains unexplored.

    Brett Phaneuf, the co-founder of the charity ProMare and the mastermind behind the Mayflower project, said the ocean exerts “the most powerful force” on the global climate.

    Having a ship without people on board allows scientists to expand the area they can observe.

    A variety of technology and service providers have contributed to the project with hundreds of individuals involved from nations including India, Switzerland, and the United States.

    Smart captain

    The non-profit venture will offer the data gathered by the project free of charge. The information could be of particular use to the future of commercial shipping.

    The autonomous ship is scheduled to embark on May 15 if the weather is favorable and permission is granted by British authorities.

    The journey to Plymouth, Massachusetts—the same voyage made by pilgrims on the original “Mayflower” in 1620 as they sought a new life in America—will take three weeks.

    While the Mayflower 400 voyage has been delayed because of the pandemic, at least no one will fall ill on the trip.

    No one will get bored or tired or sick on this one. So it can take as long as it likes to do science.

    Sitting alongside him were three computer technicians checking the equipment remotely.

    Construction of the trimaran, which is automated from the robotic rudder that steers it to the diesel generator that supplements its solar power, took a year.

    Developing its “smart captain”, the onboard artificial intelligence, took even longer as the computer has had to learn how to identify maritime obstacles by analyzing thousands of photographs.

    Lack of regulations

    The “Mayflower 400” also had to be taught how to avoid collisions and first went to sea for “supervised learning”.

    Robotics and software engineer Ollie Thompson said that by running a “number of scenarios” the ship can learn “what are good actions, bad actions, so safe and unsafe”.

    So if it makes a mistake, the boat can correct itself “and then learn itself,” he added.

    Similar robotic data collection has been ongoing in space for decades.

    While the ship is totally autonomous, the team will monitor the ship 24 hours a day from England, ready to intervene remotely in case of danger.

    ELE Times Research Desk
    ELE Times Research Deskhttps://www.eletimes.ai
    ELE Times provides extensive global coverage of Electronics, Technology and the Market. In addition to providing in-depth articles, ELE Times attracts the industry’s largest, qualified and highly engaged audiences, who appreciate our timely, relevant content and popular formats. ELE Times helps you build experience, drive traffic, communicate your contributions to the right audience, generate leads and market your products favourably.

    Related News

    Must Read

    STMicroelectronics’ new GaN ICs platform for motion control boosts appliance energy ratings

    STMicroelectronics unveiled new smart power components that let home...

    Keysight Hosts AI Thought Leadership Conclave in Bengaluru

     Keysight Technologies, Inc. announced the AI Thought Leadership Conclave, a...

    Government approves 17 projects worth Rs. 7,172 crore under ECMS

    The Ministry of Electronics and IT announced for the...

    BD Soft strengthens cybersecurity offerings for BFSI and Fintech businesses with advanced solutions

    BD Software Distribution Pvt. Ltd. has expanded its Managed...

    Advancing Quantum Computing R&D through Simulation

    Courtesy: Synopsys Even as we push forward into new frontiers...

    Overcoming BEOL Patterning Challenges at the 3-NM Node

    Courtesy: Lam Research ● Controlling critical process parameters is key...

    Driving Innovation with High-Performance but Low-Power Multi-Core MCUs

    Courtesy: Renesas Over the last decade, the number of connected...

    Evolving from IoT to edge AI system development

    Courtesy: Avnet The advancement of machine learning (ML) along with...

    From the grid to the gate: Powering the third energy revolution

    Courtesy: Taylor, Robert, Mannesson, Henrik, Texas Instruments A significant change...

    Rohde & Schwarz India Pvt. Ltd. unveils R&D Centre in New Delhi, India

    Rohde & Schwarz announced the expansion of its Research...