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A Hybrid Lister‐Outrigger Probe for Rapid Marine Geothermal Gradient Measurement
Author(s) -
Hornbach Matthew J.,
Sylvester Joshua,
Hayward Chris,
Kühn Michel,
HuhnFrehers Katrin,
Freudenthal Tim,
Watt Sebastian F. L.,
Berndt Christian,
Kutterolf Steffen,
Kuhlmann Jannis,
Sievers Carina,
Rapp Sophia,
Pallapies Kilian,
Gatter Ricarda,
Hoenekopp Leonie
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
earth and space science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.843
H-Index - 23
ISSN - 2333-5084
DOI - 10.1029/2020ea001327
Subject(s) - remote sensing , environmental science , geothermal gradient , geology , materials science , geophysics
We have successfully constructed and tested a new, portable, Hybrid Lister‐Outrigger (HyLO) probe designed to measure geothermal gradients in submarine environments. The lightweight, low‐cost probe is 1–3 m long and contains 4–12 semiconductor temperature sensors that have a temperature resolution of 0.002°C, a sample rate of <2 s, and a maximum working depth of ~2,100 m below sea level (mbsl). Probe endurance is continuous via ship power to water depths of ~700 mbsl or up to ~1 week on batteries in depths >500 mbsl. Data are saved on solid‐state disks, transferred directly to the ship during deployment via a data cable, or transmitted via Bluetooth when the probe is at the sea surface. The probe contains an accelerometer to measure tilt, internal pressure, temperature, and humidity gauges. Key advantages of this probe include (1) near‐real‐time temperature measurements and data transfer; (2) a low‐cost, transportable, and lightweight design; (3) easy and rapid two‐point attachment to a gravity corer, (4) short (3–5 min) thermal response times; (5) high temporal/spatial resolution; and (6) longer deployment endurance compared to traditional methods. We successfully tested the probe both in lakes and during sea trials in May 2019 offshore Montserrat during the R/V Meteor Cruise 154/2. Probe‐measured thermal gradients were consistent with seafloor ocean‐drilling temperature measurements. Ongoing probe improvements include the addition of real‐time bottom‐camera feeds and long‐term (6–12 months) deployment for monitoring.

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