Acceptance is successful!

"Wenhai No. 1" 6000-meter-level autonomous remote-controlled underwater robot was officially delivered

  Recently, the "Wenhai No. 1" 6,000-meter-level autonomous remote-controlled underwater robot developed by the Shenyang Institute of Automation, Chinese Academy of Sciences completed the sea test and scientific research application, passed the acceptance and delivered it to the user.

  "Wenhai No. 1" is a 6000-meter-level deep-sea exploration operation integrated high-tech marine equipment customized for the needs of marine comprehensive scientific research. It has the functions of large-scale autonomous cruise detection and fixed-point fine remote control sampling operation. "Three-in-one" multi-working mode.

  In the sea trial and application, "Wenhai No. 1" performed a total of 17 submersible missions. According to different mission requirements, it could flexibly switch between three working modes to efficiently complete the test and scientific research tasks.

"Wenhai No. 1" has been fully verified for its sounding side scan and shallow profile acoustic detection capabilities, optical detection capabilities, and manipulator fixed-point sampling capabilities, and all indicators meet the sea trial assessment requirements.

At the same time, "Wenhai No. 1" also obtained high-precision detection data near the seabed, columnar samples of surface sediments and seabed biological samples, realizing the refined measurement of the earth's gravity field, magnetic field and other information. Field matching navigation research provides technical support.

  "Wenhai No. 1" is my country's first autonomous remote-controlled unmanned submersible delivered for engineering applications. It will be installed on the "Ocean Geology No. 9" ship of Qingdao Institute of Marine Geology, China Geological Survey, serving marine environmental surveys, biodiversity Deep-sea scientific expeditions such as surveys, exploration of specific targets on the seafloor, in-situ detection of deep-sea extreme environments, and deep-sea mineral resources surveys.

  (Headquarters CCTV reporter Shuai Junquan)