Oceanographers have driven the widespread use and acceptance of robotic and autonomous systems in the marine environment. These platforms transform our monitoring capability through autonomous, adaptive and persistent observations from the sea surface to the deepest depths and furthest reaches of the oceans.
The scientific community have broad access to Marine Autonomous Systems platforms, sensors and networks. The Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) supports the Marine Autonomous and Robotic Systems (MARS) fleet at the National Oceanography Centre, and NERC-funded scientists have access to support world class oceanography.
The MARS fleet is one of the largest and most advanced in the world, having benefited from a 10ドル million investment as part of the UK Government’s ‘Eight Great Technologies’ initiative, and 16ドル million from the Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund. Key to its success are the 45 engineers and technologists that develop, maintain, and operate the vehicles.
On this page
The Fleet
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Gliders
Gliders can operate for months at sea.
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Autonomous Surface Vehicles
ASVs can transit the oceans taking measurements at the air-sea interface.
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Autosubs
Unmanned submarines can take measurements in the deep ocean, under Arctic sea ice or below glaciers in Antarctica.
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Remotely Operated Vehicles
Tethered underwater platforms are piloted from the ship.
Track our vehicles on live missions
We support operations the length of the Atlantic as well as further afield.
Our engineers also develop new platforms and infrastructure to continue advancing the fleet’s scientific capabilities.
Track our vehiclesNational Marine Equipment Pool
The equipment in the MARS fleet is part of the National Marine Equipment Pool for the use of the marine science community.
National Marine Equipment PoolMarine Facilities Planning
The equipment management and tracking system can monitor the movement of equipment worldwide to support science delivery.
Marine Facilities PlanningMARS Teams and Groups
The equipment in the MARS fleet is of the National Marine Equipment Pool (NMEP) for use by the marine science community. Please discuss your requirements with the relevant engineering manager.
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AUV Operations Team
The AUV Operations team maintains and operates the high powered Autonomous Underwater Vehicles (AUV). Our engineers work closely with scientists to support their science goals and expeditions.
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Gliders and Unmanned Surface Vehicles Team
The Glider team supports deployments of the Underwater Gliders and Unmanned Surface Vehicles. Experts in deployment and operation of marine robots over the horizon, the glider team routinely support science campaigns across the globe.
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ROV Team
The ROV (Remotely Operated Vehicle) team operate the Isis and Hybis ROVs. The team will pilot these platforms remotely from the ship, which allows scientists to watch live as the vehicles gather samples, photos and video footage.
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MARS Development Group
Experts in the development of novel Marine Autonomous and Robotic Systems for ocean science, oil and gas, and deep sea mining. The group develops new platforms to extend the capabilities of the MARS fleet. We are responsible for new AUV platforms Autosub Long Range (ALR1500) and Autosub2KUI.
Projects
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Oceanids
Visit project websiteOceanids will develop new innovative autonomous vehicles, pushing boundaries of ocean exploration. Allowing us to reach new depths, travel under ice, and collect data in environmentally hostile environments, autonomous vehicles are the future of marine science.
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RAPID
Visit project websiteThe RAPID-AMOC programme (2014–2020) continues from the two previous programmes to study the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC).