An aquanaut is any person who remains underwater, breathing at the ambient pressure for long enough for the concentration of the inert components of the breathing gas dissolved in the body tissues to reach equilibrium, in a state known as saturation.
Description
The term aquanaut derives from the Latin word aqua ("water") plus the Greek nautes ("sailor"), by analogy to the similar construction "astronaut". The word is used to describe a person who stays underwater, breathing at the ambient pressure for long enough for the concentration of the inert components of the breathing gas dissolved in the body tissues to reach equilibrium, in a state known as saturation. Usually this is done in an underwater habitat on the seafloor for a period equal to or greater than 24 continuous hours without returning to the surface.[1][2][3]
The term is often restricted to scientists and academics, though there were a group of military aquanauts during the SEALAB program. Commercial divers in similar circumstances are referred to as saturation divers. An aquanaut is distinct from a submariner, in that a submariner is confined to a moving underwater vehicle such as a submarine that holds the water pressure out.[1][2][3]
From 1969 to 1970, NASA carried out two programs, known as Tektite I and Tektite II, using the Tektite habitat. Missions were carried out in which scientists stayed in the capsule for up to 20 days, in order to study fish ecology as well as to prove that saturation diving techniques in an underwater laboratory, breathing a nitrogen-oxygen atmosphere, could be safely and efficiently accomplished at a minimal cost.[7][8] Tektite II also studied the psychological aspects of living in such confinement.[8]
A unit of the Russian Navy has developed an aquanaut program that has deployed divers more than 300 metres (980 ft) deep. An ocean vessel has been developed and is based in Vladivostok that is specialized for submarine and other deep sea rescue and that is equipped with a diving complex and a 120-seat deep sea diving craft.[10]
Accidental aquanaut
A Nigerian ship's cook, Harrison Odjegba Okene, survived for 60 hours in a sunken tugboat, the Jascon-4, which had capsized on 26 May 2013 while performing tension tow operations and stabilising an oil tanker at a Chevron platform in the Gulf of Guinea off the Nigerian coast.[11] After sinking, the boat came to rest upside-down on the sea floor at a depth of 30 m (98 ft). Eleven crew members died, but Okene felt his way into the engineer's office, where an air pocket about 1.2 m (3 ft 11 in) in height contained enough oxygen to keep him alive.[12][13][14][15]
Three days after the accident, Okene was discovered by three South African divers from a saturation diving support vessel, employed to investigate the scene and recover bodies. Having discovered Okene alive, the rescuers provided him with a diving helmet so he could breathe during the transit to the diving bell. He was then returned to the surface for decompression from saturation, which took about two and a half days.[11][16] After his ordeal underwater he faced and overcame his nightly terrors by becoming a commercial diver himself, earning a International Marine Contractors Association recognised Class 2 certificate.[17]
^Davis, Michael (1979). "Immersion hypothermia in scuba diving". South Pacific Underwater Medicine Society Journal. 9 (2). Archived from the original on 13 January 2013. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
^ abNowlis, D. P.; Wortz, E. C.; Watters, H. (2 September 2013). "Tektite 2 habitability research program". NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS). Retrieved 11 November 2024.
Flemming, N. C.; Max, M. D. (eds.). Code of Practice for Scientific Diving: Principles for the Safe Practice of Scientific Diving in Different Environments. UNESCO Technical Papers in Marine Science 53.