Algorithm predicts drift direction of people lost at sea
Alternative Headline:Saving lives
(MENAFN- Swissinfo) Algorithm predicts drift direction of people lost at sea
May 27, 2020 - 12:28
A mathematical method that can speed up search-and-rescue operations at sea has been developed by scientists at the federal technology institute ETH Zurich and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Hundreds of people die at sea every year in vessel and airplane accidents, ETH Zurich noted in a statement on Tuesday. 'Emergency teams have little time to rescue those in the water because the probability of finding a person alive plummets after six hours. Beyond tides and challenging weather conditions, unsteady coastal currents often make search and rescue operations exceedingly difficult.' An international research team led by George Haller, professor of nonlinear dynamics at ETH Zurich, has gained new insights into coastal flows. These promise to enhance the search and rescue techniques currently in use. Using tools from dynamical systems theory and ocean data, the team has developed an algorithm to predict where objects and people floating in water – potentially also oil spills – will drift. With fast-changing coastal waters, predictions today are often inaccurate owing to uncertain parameters and missing data, the statement said. 'As a result, a search may be launched in the wrong location, causing a loss of precious time.' It's a TRAP Haller's team obtained mathematical results predicting that objects floating on the ocean's surface should gather along a few special curves, which they call TRansient Attracting Profiles (TRAPs). These curves are invisible to the naked eye but can be extracted and tracked from instantaneous ocean surface current data using recent mathematical methods developed by the ETH Zurich team. The Swiss and US scientists tested their TRAP-based search algorithm in two separate ocean experiments off Martha's Vineyard near the northeastern coast of the United States. Working from the same real-time data available to the Coast Guard, the team successfully identified TRAPs in the region in real time. They found that buoys and mannequins thrown into the water quickly gathered along these evolving curves. 'Of several competing approaches tested in this project, this was the only algorithm that consistently worked in situ,' Haller said. 'Our hope is that this method will become a standard part of the toolkit of coast guards everywhere.'
May 27, 2020 - 12:28
A mathematical method that can speed up search-and-rescue operations at sea has been developed by scientists at the federal technology institute ETH Zurich and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Hundreds of people die at sea every year in vessel and airplane accidents, ETH Zurich noted in a statement on Tuesday. 'Emergency teams have little time to rescue those in the water because the probability of finding a person alive plummets after six hours. Beyond tides and challenging weather conditions, unsteady coastal currents often make search and rescue operations exceedingly difficult.' An international research team led by George Haller, professor of nonlinear dynamics at ETH Zurich, has gained new insights into coastal flows. These promise to enhance the search and rescue techniques currently in use. Using tools from dynamical systems theory and ocean data, the team has developed an algorithm to predict where objects and people floating in water – potentially also oil spills – will drift. With fast-changing coastal waters, predictions today are often inaccurate owing to uncertain parameters and missing data, the statement said. 'As a result, a search may be launched in the wrong location, causing a loss of precious time.' It's a TRAP Haller's team obtained mathematical results predicting that objects floating on the ocean's surface should gather along a few special curves, which they call TRansient Attracting Profiles (TRAPs). These curves are invisible to the naked eye but can be extracted and tracked from instantaneous ocean surface current data using recent mathematical methods developed by the ETH Zurich team. The Swiss and US scientists tested their TRAP-based search algorithm in two separate ocean experiments off Martha's Vineyard near the northeastern coast of the United States. Working from the same real-time data available to the Coast Guard, the team successfully identified TRAPs in the region in real time. They found that buoys and mannequins thrown into the water quickly gathered along these evolving curves. 'Of several competing approaches tested in this project, this was the only algorithm that consistently worked in situ,' Haller said. 'Our hope is that this method will become a standard part of the toolkit of coast guards everywhere.'

Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the
information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept
any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images,
videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information
contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright
issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.
Most popular stories
Market Research

- Wallpaper Market Size, Industry Overview, Latest Insights And Forecast 2025-2033
- GCL Subsidiary, 2Game Digital, Partners With Kucoin Pay To Accept Secure Crypto Payments In Real Time
- North America Perms And Relaxants Market Size, Share And Growth Report 2025-2033
- Chaingpt Pad Unveils Buzz System: Turning Social Hype Into Token Allocation
- Invromining Expands Multi-Asset Mining Platform, Launches New AI-Driven Infrastructure
- Global Mobile Wallet Market Size Projected To Reach USD 701.0 Billion By 2033 CAGR Of 15.09%.
Comments
No comment