This was the last season for ARIANNA R&D work in
Antarctica and it was a great one. We
successfully accomplished all of the tasks we had hoped to do this year and
more. ARIANNA is now ready to transition
from the R&D phase by scaling up to the full array of ~1500 stations in an
effort to detect cosmogenic neutrinos.
The deployment team this season (2014-2015) consisted of 5
physicists from UC Irvine: Steve Barwick
(PI), Corey Reed (Project Scientist: i.e. glorified postdoc :), James Walker
(grad student), Chris Persichilli (grad student) and myself Joulien Tatar
(postdoc). Needless to say all of us
were really excited to be going to Antarctica.
Chris and James were even more so since this was their first trip
down.
Even though preparation for the following season always
begins as soon as we get back from the previous deployment, getting to
Antarctica is much simpler than one would think. NSF has excellent subcontractors who take
care of the whole process (plane tickets, luggage, hotels, clothing, etc) of
getting us safely to McMurdo, the main USAP base, and then back home.
After a couple of days in Christchurch, we left for McMurdo. Sometimes, the head winds are too high or the
weather in McMurdo is poor for landing so the plane has to turn back. This time we were fortunate to make it to
McMurdo on our first try. We spent about
a week in McMurdo. We had more briefings
and training to go through while waiting for all of our cargo, shipped by boat,
to make its way to McMurdo so we can leave for our field camp. The station this year was at maximum
capacity. Many projects that were
supposed to take place during the 2013-2014 season were delayed a year due of
the government shutdown. As a result,
this year the USAP had to catch up and provide support for more projects than
typical.
It took 6 helicopter flights to fly all of the components
for the new stations and the rest of our electronics equipment. Two wilderness first responders (wolfers)
went to the ARIANNA site (in Moore's Bay on the Ross Ice Shelf) a day ahead of
us to set up camp. This was great
because it allowed us to make every day count by starting work as soon as we
arrived at camp.
Not long after we flew to the field camp, the wolfers went
back to McMurdo. The five of us,
physicists, were alone on a remote Antarctic ice-sheet fully prepared to fend
for ourselves and each other. This is
the first season we have camped without a wolfer. The important help we were accustomed to
getting from them was now all on us. We
had to make sure we always had melted snow for water, cleaned the two common
tents (kitchen tent and science tent), check-in with McMurdo daily, cook, etc
etc...
Cooking was one of the most time consuming and difficult
chores we had. We would each rotate to
cook and clean for a day. So one person
would cook for everyone once every five days, which was not too bad. Cooking in a small tent with a very limited
amount of spices and ingredients (all provided to us from McMurdo) requires a
certain amount of ingenuity it turns out we all possess. The food we made was delectable and we
managed not to burn down the tent. We
wrote down our food recipes so they can be used by the deployment team for
years to come. :)
Our primary science objective was to have seven stations up
and running and collecting high quality data.
That effort began by assembling station components that we did not ship
pre-assembled. The most time-consuming
part of the assembly process was the power tower. It consisted of putting together two ~10'
triangular metal segments, mounting a 100W solar panel, and attaching two
communication antennas. It is as simple
as it sounds and it took less than an hour to do. Everything else (battery, antennas,
electronics box with DAQ) came pre-assembled. Once we had all of the components laid out and
thoroughly tested, we were ready to take them to their final installation
location. Each station was placed at a
corner of a hexagon and has a spacing of ~1km from the center of the hexagon
where the seventh station (and our base camp) was located. The transportation of the station was almost
effortless, since we were given a sled we could load everything into and pull
it with a snowmobile. At a station's
site we would first install the power tower and then dig four vertically
oriented triangular slots to place the antennas in. Digging these ~6' deep and 2' wide holes with
a shovel was the most labor intensive and time consuming (1 hour) process of
the station installation. Once the holes
were dug, we placed the Log-periodic Dipole Antennas (LPDA) in them, connected
the various cables (power, communication, and LPDA) to the electronics box we
placed at the base of the power tower, and had data streaming all the way back
to our UC Irvine data server! It took us
less than 4 hours to install a station.
If we started installation a bit after breakfast, the station would be
up and running before it was time for lunch.
To be continued in part 2...
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