Ships WHOI operates several
research vessels, owned by the
United States Navy, the
National Science Foundation, or the institution: •
R/V Atlantis (AGOR-25) – 274 feet long, mothership of the
Alvin submarine •
R/V Tioga (WHOI-owned) – 60 feet long •
R/V Neil Armstrong (AGOR-27) – 238 feet long WHOI formerly operated
R/V Knorr, which was replaced by R/V
Neil Armstrong in 2015, and also the
R/V Oceanus, which was transferred elsewhere in 2011.
Small boat fleet WHOI operates many small boats used in inland harbors, ponds, rivers, and coastal bays. All are owned by the institution itself. • Motorboat
Echo – 29 feet long (mainly used as a work boat to support dive operations, also the newest small research craft at WHOI) • Motorboat
Mytilus – 24 feet long (mainly used in water too shallow for larger craft and is a versatile coastal research boat) • Motorboat
Calanus – 21 feet long (mainly used in local water bodies such as Great Harbor, Vineyard Sound and Buzzards Bay) • Motorboat
Limulus – 13 feet long (mainly used to shuttle equipment to larger craft and as a work platform for near-shore research tasks) • Rowboat
Orzrus – 12 feet long (mainly used in harbors and ponds where motor craft are not permitted)
Underwater vehicles in 1978 WHOI also has developed numerous underwater autonomous and remotely operated vehicles for research: •
Alvin (DSV-2) – human-occupied vehicle, the institution's most well-known equipment •
Deepsea Challenger – human-occupied vehicle designed, field-tested, and later donated to the WHOI by Canadian film director
James Cameron •
Jason – a
remotely operated vehicle (ROV) •
Sentry – an
autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) and successor to
ABE •
Nereus – A hybrid remotely operated vehicle (HROV); lost on 5/10/14 while exploring the Kermadec Trench. •
Remus – Remote Environment Monitoring UnitS, a family of autonomous underwater vehicles •
Mesobot - an autonomous underwater vehicle built to track sea life in the
mesopelagic zone •
SeaBED – an autonomous underwater vehicle optimized for high-resolution seafloor imaging •
Spray Glider – a remotely operated vehicle, used to collect data about the salinity, temperature, etc. about an area •
Slocum Glider – another remotely operated vehicle, with functions similar to the functions of the Spray Glider •
CAMPER – a towed vehicle used to collect samples from the seabed of the
Arctic Ocean •
Seasoar – a submarine towed by a ship •
TowCam – a submarine with cameras that is towed by a ship along the ocean floor to take photographs •
Video Plankton Recorder – a submarine with microscopic camera systems, towed along by a ship to take videos of plankton •
Autonomous Benthic Explorer (ABE) – an autonomous underwater vehicle ==See also==