By Elizabeth Weidner.
Over the past year, the Broadband Acoustics Lab, led by DMS Assistant Professor Elizabeth Weidner, designed and built a new kind of seafloor lander to investigate how melting glaciers are transforming the coastal Arctic ocean.
The custom-built instrument houses several advanced sonar systems that use sound to observe processes that are otherwise difficult to capture in remote, ice-covered environments.
The lander was developed, assembled, and tested at the University of Connecticut, in close collaboration with Professor Tom Blanford from the University of New Hampshire. A new DMS graduate student, Cloé Mueller, who joined the lab in the fall, played a key role in system testing and preparation.
The lander will be deployed this summer in Svalbard near a marine-terminating glacier, where it will collect long-term acoustic measurements. These data will help the Broadband Acoustics Lab better understand how melting glaciers influence ocean structure, underwater sound propagation, and the rapidly changing Arctic environment.


