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Ocean hazardous spills and search and rescue incidents are more prevalent as maritime activities increase across all sectors of society. However, emergency response time remains a factor due to a lack of information to accurately forecast the location of small objects. Existing drifting characterization techniques are limited to objects whose drifting properties are not affected by on-board wind and surface current sensors. To address this challenge, we study the application of multirotor unmanned aerial systems (UAS), and embedded navigation technology, for on-demand wind velocity and surface flow measurements to characterize drifting properties of small objects. An off-the-shelf quadrotor was used to measure wind velocity at 10 m above surface level near a drifting object. We also leveraged UAS-grade attitude and heading reference systems and GPS antennas to build water-proof tracking modules that record the position and orientation, as well of translational and rotational velocities, of objects drifting in water. The quadrotor and water-proof tracking modules were deployed during field experiments conducted in lake and ocean environments to characterize the leeway parameters of manikins simulating a person in water. Leeway parameters were found to be an order of magnitude within previous estimates derived using conventional wind and surface current observations. We also determined that multirotor UAS and water-proof tracking modules can provide accurate and high-resolution ambient information that is critical to understand how changes in orientation affect the downwind displacement and jibing characteristics of small objects floating in water. These findings support further development and application of multirotor UAS technology for leeway characterization and understanding the effect of an objects downwind-relative orientation on its drifting characteristics.
A formulation is developed to assimilate ocean-wave data into the Numerical Flow Analysis (NFA) code. NFA is a Cartesian-based implicit Large-Eddy Simulation (LES) code with Volume of Fluid (VOF) interface capturing. The sequential assimilation of da
A method for conducting leeway field experiments to establish the drift properties of small objects (0.1-25 m) is described. The objective is to define a standardized and unambiguous procedure for condensing the drift properties down to a set of coef
Conventionally neutral atmospheric boundary layers (CNBLs), which are characterized with zero surface potential temperature flux and capped by an inversion of potential temperature, are frequently encountered in nature. Therefore, predicting the wind
Examining botanical trees, Leonardo da Vinci noted that the total cross-section of branches is conserved across branching nodes. In this Letter, it is proposed that this rule is a consequence of the tree skeleton having a self-similar structure and t
As wind energy continues to expand, increased interaction between wind farms and their surroundings can be expected. Using natural snowfall to visualize the air flow in the wake of a utility-scale wind turbine at unprecedented spatio-temporal resolut