Day 10 in Antarctica
December 6, 2013
Today was cold and windy.
We drilled more holes and took more video in the morning. In the afternoon, I worked on a dive tracker. The dive tracker was made by a group of students at Hobart College, Tasmania. They are working on using Arduino electronics, accelerometers, a magnetometer, and GPS to track under water autonomous vehicles. They build us one to try on Tyler to see if we can track his dives. The tracker saves the data to an SD card. We tried it out, but didn't understand the data and broke the magnetic switch. I bypassed the switch. I also did some test to see if it was actually working. I didn't come to a conclusion.
For dinner, I fixed soup (using leftover pasta water from the night before) and hash browns. They go amazingly well together after only a week in the field.
Today was cold and windy.
We drilled more holes and took more video in the morning. In the afternoon, I worked on a dive tracker. The dive tracker was made by a group of students at Hobart College, Tasmania. They are working on using Arduino electronics, accelerometers, a magnetometer, and GPS to track under water autonomous vehicles. They build us one to try on Tyler to see if we can track his dives. The tracker saves the data to an SD card. We tried it out, but didn't understand the data and broke the magnetic switch. I bypassed the switch. I also did some test to see if it was actually working. I didn't come to a conclusion.
Me, working on electronics in the dive tracker... |
For dinner, I fixed soup (using leftover pasta water from the night before) and hash browns. They go amazingly well together after only a week in the field.