DeepSea'Nnovation: A Deep Sea Camera to Study Bioluminescence In Situ
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| Title: | DeepSea'Nnovation: A Deep Sea Camera to Study Bioluminescence In Situ |
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| Authors: | Martini, Séverine, Gojak, Carl, Louber, Didier, Mahiouz, Karim, Puigserver, Bernard, Ferrera, Maxime |
| Contributors: | martini, severine |
| Source: | OCEANS 2025 Brest. :1-4 |
| Publisher Information: | IEEE, 2025. |
| Publication Year: | 2025 |
| Subject Terms: | deep ocean, [PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-BIO-PH] Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/Biological Physics [physics.bio-ph], technology, imaging, [SDE.IE] Environmental Sciences/Environmental Engineering, [SDU.STU.OC] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Oceanography, bioluminescence |
| Description: | Bioluminescence, the production and emission of light by organisms themselves in the ocean, is a widely distributed capability of organisms that could be used as a proxy of the presence of organisms, as well as to understand ecological function of such light emission. Thanks to advances in lowlight imaging technology in recent years, ROVs and submarine vehicles have offered access to in situ observation of organisms and their bioluminescence emission patterns. Despite existing technology, today the number of observations, records and reported bioluminescence images in situ remains rare in the world. The DeepSea'Nnovation project therefore proposes the implementation of a low-light sensitive camera dedicated to bioluminescence observation on underwater vehicles of the French fleet "Flotte Océanographique Francaise" (FOF). |
| Document Type: | Article Conference object |
| File Description: | application/pdf |
| DOI: | 10.1109/oceans58557.2025.11104525 |
| Access URL: | https://hal.science/hal-05304258v1 https://hal.science/hal-05304258v1/document https://doi.org/10.1109/oceans58557.2025.11104525 |
| Rights: | STM Policy #29 CC BY |
| Accession Number: | edsair.doi.dedup.....131c957fbe864be7e6de228a6f13eb42 |
| Database: | OpenAIRE |
| Abstract: | Bioluminescence, the production and emission of light by organisms themselves in the ocean, is a widely distributed capability of organisms that could be used as a proxy of the presence of organisms, as well as to understand ecological function of such light emission. Thanks to advances in lowlight imaging technology in recent years, ROVs and submarine vehicles have offered access to in situ observation of organisms and their bioluminescence emission patterns. Despite existing technology, today the number of observations, records and reported bioluminescence images in situ remains rare in the world. The DeepSea'Nnovation project therefore proposes the implementation of a low-light sensitive camera dedicated to bioluminescence observation on underwater vehicles of the French fleet "Flotte Océanographique Francaise" (FOF). |
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| DOI: | 10.1109/oceans58557.2025.11104525 |
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