Robo-penguin: how artificial birds are relaying the secrets of ocean currents

The Guardian 

If it looks like a penguin and swims like a penguin – but it's actually a robot – then it must be the latest advance in marine sensory equipment. The Quadroin is an autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV): a 3D-printed self-propelled machine designed to mimic a penguin in order to measure the properties of oceanic eddies. It was developed by Burkard Baschek while head of Germany's Institute of Coastal Ocean Dynamics at the Helmholtz Centre Hereon in Geesthacht after he watched more than $20,000 of his equipment sink to the bottom of the Pacific Ocean. Eddies are small ocean currents that other research methods have struggled to capture. They influence all the animals and plants in the seas as well as the Earth's climate, driving roughly 50% of all phytoplankton production.

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