Localization of Surface or Near-Surface Drifting Mines for Unmanned Systems in the Persian Gulf

This thesis investigates the combined use of ocean models, such as idealized surface current flows, and search models, including expanding area and discrete myopic search methods, to improve the probability of detecting a near-surface, drifting object over time. Enhanced search effectiveness is fac...

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Main Author: Yau, Meng Wee Joses
Other Authors: Chu, Peter C.
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/7436
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-74362014-11-27T16:06:58Z Localization of Surface or Near-Surface Drifting Mines for Unmanned Systems in the Persian Gulf Yau, Meng Wee Joses Chu, Peter C. Chung, Timothy H. Betsch, Ronald E. Physical Oceanography This thesis investigates the combined use of ocean models, such as idealized surface current flows, and search models, including expanding area and discrete myopic search methods, to improve the probability of detecting a near-surface, drifting object over time. Enhanced search effectiveness is facilitated by the use of robotic search agents, such as a tactical unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV) or unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), leveraging simulation methods to inform the search process. The presented work investigates the impact of using nave versus optimized search patterns on localizing a drifting object, including a surrogate ocean model using idealized flow as well as historical data sets with Weibull-distributed perturbations. Numerical studies and extensive analysis using different permutations of model parameters (including the relative speed of the drifting object, time late in the searcher�۪s arrival to the search area, sensor sweep width, and duration of the search mission) identify the significant factors affecting the overall probability of detection. Such insights enable further explorations using empirical datasets for specific oceanographic regions of interest. 2012-07-30T23:16:13Z 2012-07-30T23:16:13Z 2012-06 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/7436 Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
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description This thesis investigates the combined use of ocean models, such as idealized surface current flows, and search models, including expanding area and discrete myopic search methods, to improve the probability of detecting a near-surface, drifting object over time. Enhanced search effectiveness is facilitated by the use of robotic search agents, such as a tactical unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV) or unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), leveraging simulation methods to inform the search process. The presented work investigates the impact of using nave versus optimized search patterns on localizing a drifting object, including a surrogate ocean model using idealized flow as well as historical data sets with Weibull-distributed perturbations. Numerical studies and extensive analysis using different permutations of model parameters (including the relative speed of the drifting object, time late in the searcher�۪s arrival to the search area, sensor sweep width, and duration of the search mission) identify the significant factors affecting the overall probability of detection. Such insights enable further explorations using empirical datasets for specific oceanographic regions of interest.
author2 Chu, Peter C.
author_facet Chu, Peter C.
Yau, Meng Wee Joses
author Yau, Meng Wee Joses
spellingShingle Yau, Meng Wee Joses
Localization of Surface or Near-Surface Drifting Mines for Unmanned Systems in the Persian Gulf
author_sort Yau, Meng Wee Joses
title Localization of Surface or Near-Surface Drifting Mines for Unmanned Systems in the Persian Gulf
title_short Localization of Surface or Near-Surface Drifting Mines for Unmanned Systems in the Persian Gulf
title_full Localization of Surface or Near-Surface Drifting Mines for Unmanned Systems in the Persian Gulf
title_fullStr Localization of Surface or Near-Surface Drifting Mines for Unmanned Systems in the Persian Gulf
title_full_unstemmed Localization of Surface or Near-Surface Drifting Mines for Unmanned Systems in the Persian Gulf
title_sort localization of surface or near-surface drifting mines for unmanned systems in the persian gulf
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/7436
work_keys_str_mv AT yaumengweejoses localizationofsurfaceornearsurfacedriftingminesforunmannedsystemsinthepersiangulf
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