What's at the bottom of the ocean -- and how we're getting there | Victor Vescovo

343,027 views

2019-08-02 ・ TED


New videos

What's at the bottom of the ocean -- and how we're getting there | Victor Vescovo

343,027 views ・ 2019-08-02

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

Translator: Reviewer: Daban Q. Jaff
00:12
David Biello: So Victor, what have you been up to?
0
12730
3478
00:17
Victor Vescovo: That's the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean,
1
17042
2642
00:19
and I guess I read too much Jules Verne as a young boy,
2
19708
2976
00:22
and so for the last four years I've led a team to design and build
3
22708
3851
00:26
what is now the most advanced and deepest diving submersible on the planet,
4
26583
3560
00:30
and I have the ability to personally pilot it too.
5
30167
2642
00:32
So this was us in December of last year,
6
32833
2268
00:35
for the first time -- the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean.
7
35125
2643
00:37
DB: And nobody's seen that before right?
8
37792
1934
00:39
That's just you. VV: No.
9
39750
1726
00:41
Well, now everybody else.
10
41500
1393
00:42
DB: Who does that?
11
42917
2517
00:45
Like --
12
45458
1268
00:46
VV: Well, I think everyone has seen the developments in the last 10, 15 years.
13
46750
3726
00:50
You have a bunch of people that have the means to explore outer space,
14
50500
3393
00:53
like SpaceX or Blue Origin --
15
53917
2351
00:56
those guys --
16
56292
1267
00:57
and we're going the other direction.
17
57583
1768
00:59
So it's a wonderful era
18
59375
1268
01:00
of private individuals spending their resources
19
60667
2226
01:02
to develop technologies that can take us to places
20
62917
2351
01:05
that have never been explored before,
21
65292
1809
01:07
and the oceans of the world is --
22
67125
1851
01:09
it's almost a cliché to say it's 70 percent of our entire planet,
23
69000
3684
01:12
and of that, 95 percent is unexplored.
24
72708
2435
01:15
So what we're trying to do with our expedition
25
75167
2309
01:17
is to build and prove out a submersible
26
77500
1893
01:19
that can go to any point on the bottom of the planet
27
79417
2684
01:22
to explore the 60 percent of this planet that is still unexplored.
28
82125
4583
01:27
DB: You need a pretty cool tool to do that, right?
29
87208
2351
01:29
VV: Right.
30
89583
1268
01:30
Now the tool is the submarine, the Limiting Factor.
31
90875
2601
01:33
It's a state-of-the-art vessel
32
93500
1476
01:35
supported by the support ship, the Pressure Drop.
33
95000
2454
01:37
It has a two-person titanium sphere, 90 millimeters-thick,
34
97478
2790
01:40
that keeps it at one atmosphere,
35
100292
1601
01:41
and it has the ability to dive repeatedly
36
101917
2684
01:44
down to the very deepest point of the ocean.
37
104625
2518
01:47
DB: So like the SpaceX of ocean exploration?
38
107167
4184
01:51
VV: Yeah, it's kind of the SpaceX of ocean exploration,
39
111375
2601
01:54
but I pilot my own vehicles.
40
114000
1684
01:55
(Laughter)
41
115708
1851
01:57
DB: Are you going to take Elon or...?
42
117583
3143
02:00
VV: Yeah, I could take someone down there.
43
120750
2059
02:02
So, Elon, if you're listening,
44
122833
1476
02:04
I'll give you a ride in mine if you give me a ride in yours.
45
124333
2851
02:07
(Laughter)
46
127208
1792
02:10
DB: So tell us what it's like down there.
47
130125
2726
02:12
I mean, we're talking about a place where the pressure is so intense
48
132875
3393
02:16
that it's like putting an Eiffel Tower on your toe.
49
136292
2434
02:18
VV: It's more than that.
50
138750
1309
02:20
It's about 16,000 psi.
51
140083
1435
02:21
So the issue is that we have this titanium sphere
52
141542
2392
02:23
that allows us to go down to these extreme depths
53
143958
2435
02:26
and come up repeatedly.
54
146417
1642
02:28
That's never been done before.
55
148083
1476
02:29
The Challenger Deep has been dived twice,
56
149583
2060
02:31
once in 1960 and once in 2012 by James Cameron,
57
151667
3267
02:34
and they went down and came back up and those were experimental craft.
58
154958
3310
02:38
This is the first commercially certified submersible
59
158292
2476
02:40
that can go up and down thousands of times with two people,
60
160792
3226
02:44
including a scientist.
61
164042
1267
02:45
We're very proud that we took down
62
165333
1851
02:47
the deepest-diving British citizen in history
63
167208
2185
02:49
just three weeks ago, Dr. Alan Jamieson of Newcastle University
64
169417
2976
02:52
who was down with us on the Java Trench.
65
172417
2601
02:55
DB: So, not too much freaks you out, is what I'm guessing.
66
175042
4892
02:59
VV: Well, it's a lot different to go diving.
67
179958
2101
03:02
If you're claustrophobic, you do not want to be in the submarine.
68
182083
3101
03:05
We go down quite a distance
69
185208
1351
03:06
and the missions typically last eight to nine hours in a confined space.
70
186583
3435
03:10
It's very different from the career I had previously
71
190042
2476
03:12
which was mountain climbing where you're in open spaces,
72
192542
2642
03:15
the wind is whipping, it's very cold.
73
195208
1810
03:17
This is the opposite. It's much more technical.
74
197042
2226
03:19
It's much more about precision in using the instruments
75
199292
2601
03:21
and troubleshooting anything that can go wrong.
76
201917
2226
03:24
But if something really goes wrong in the submersible,
77
204167
2559
03:26
you're not going to know it.
78
206750
1393
03:28
(Laughter)
79
208167
1309
03:29
DB: So you're afraid of leaks is what you're saying.
80
209500
2476
03:32
VV: Leaks are not good, but if it's a leak that's happening,
81
212000
2851
03:34
it's not that bad because if it was really bad
82
214875
2184
03:37
you wouldn't know it, again, but --
83
217083
1726
03:38
you know, fire in the capsule, that wouldn't be good either,
84
218833
2851
03:41
but it's actually a very safe submersible.
85
221708
2060
03:43
I like to say I don't trust a lot of things in life,
86
223792
2476
03:46
but I do trust titanium, I trust math
87
226292
1809
03:48
and I trust finite element analysis,
88
228125
2059
03:50
which is how you figure out
89
230208
1310
03:51
whether or not things like this can survive
90
231542
2059
03:53
these extraordinary pressures and conditions.
91
233625
2143
03:55
DB: And that sphere is so perfectly machined, right?
92
235792
3142
03:58
This is a truly unique craft.
93
238958
1976
04:00
VV: That was the real trick --
94
240958
1476
04:02
is actually building a titanium sphere
95
242458
1851
04:04
that was accurate to within .1 percent of machine.
96
244333
3143
04:07
Titanium is a hard metal to work
97
247500
1559
04:09
and a lot of people haven't figured it out,
98
249083
2060
04:11
but we were very fortunate.
99
251167
1351
04:12
Our extraordinary team was able to make an almost perfect sphere,
100
252542
3101
04:15
which when you're subjecting something to pressure,
101
255667
2434
04:18
that's the strongest geometry you can have.
102
258125
2059
04:20
When I'm in the submersible and that hatch closes,
103
260208
2393
04:22
I'm confident that I'm going to go down and come back up.
104
262625
2726
04:25
DB: And that's the thing you double-check --
105
265375
2101
04:27
that the hatch is closed?
106
267500
1309
04:28
VV: There are only two rules in diving a submarine.
107
268833
2434
04:31
Number one is close the hatch securely.
108
271291
1893
04:33
Number two is go back to rule number one.
109
273208
1976
04:35
DB: Alright so, Atlantic Ocean: check.
110
275208
3393
04:38
Southern Ocean: check.
111
278625
1768
04:40
VV: No one has ever dived the Southern Ocean before.
112
280417
2476
04:42
I know why.
113
282917
1309
04:44
It's really, really hostile.
114
284250
1393
04:45
The weather is awful.
115
285667
1309
04:47
The word collision comes to mind.
116
287000
2226
04:49
But we did that one, yes.
117
289250
1851
04:51
Glad that's over -- DB: Yeah --
118
291125
1518
04:52
VV: Thank you.
119
292667
1351
04:54
(Applause)
120
294042
1142
04:55
DB: It's like you're racing through it.
121
295208
1893
04:57
And now the Indian Ocean, as Kelly mentioned.
122
297125
2434
04:59
VV: Yeah, that was three weeks ago.
123
299583
1726
05:01
We were fortunate enough to actually solve the mystery.
124
301333
2601
05:03
If someone had asked me three weeks ago,
125
303958
1935
05:05
"What is the deepest point in the Indian Ocean?" --
126
305917
2434
05:08
no one really knew.
127
308375
1268
05:09
There were two candidates,
128
309667
1309
05:11
one off of Western Australia and one in the Java Trench.
129
311000
2643
05:13
We have this wonderful ship with a brilliant sonar.
130
313667
2434
05:16
We mapped both of them.
131
316125
1268
05:17
We sent landers down to the bottom and verified.
132
317417
2267
05:19
It's actually in the center portion of the Java Trench,
133
319708
2601
05:22
which is where no one thought it was.
134
322333
1810
05:24
In fact, every time we've completed one of our major dives,
135
324167
2809
05:27
we have to run off to Wikipedia and change it
136
327000
2143
05:29
because it's completely wrong.
137
329167
1476
05:30
(Laughter)
138
330667
1642
05:32
DB: So it probably takes longer to get down there
139
332333
3060
05:35
than the time you're able to spend down there?
140
335417
2267
05:37
VV: No, we actually spend quite a bit of time.
141
337708
2893
05:40
I have four days of oxygen supply in the vessel.
142
340625
2851
05:43
If I'm down there for four days,
143
343500
1559
05:45
something's gone so wrong I'm probably not going to use it,
144
345083
2810
05:47
but it's about three hours down to the deepest part of the ocean
145
347917
3059
05:51
and then we can spend usually three or four hours
146
351000
2309
05:53
and then another three hours up.
147
353333
1560
05:54
So you don't want to stay in there for more than 10 or 11 hours.
148
354917
3059
05:58
It can get a little tight.
149
358000
1309
05:59
DB: Alright, so the bottom of the Indian Ocean.
150
359333
2226
06:01
And this is something that no one besides you has ever seen before --
151
361583
4268
06:05
VV: This is actually imagery from one of our robotic landers.
152
365875
4018
06:09
On the bottom right you can actually see a robust assfish --
153
369917
2934
06:12
that's what it's actually called.
154
372875
1601
06:14
(Laughter)
155
374500
1018
06:15
But you can see from the left a creature that's never been seen before.
156
375542
3392
06:18
It's actually a bottom-dwelling jellyfish called a stalked ascidian,
157
378958
3226
06:22
and none of them have ever looked like this before.
158
382208
2435
06:24
It actually has a small child at the bottom of its stalk,
159
384667
2726
06:27
and it just drifted across beautifully.
160
387417
2142
06:29
So every single dive we have gone on,
161
389583
2476
06:32
even though we're only down there for a couple of hours,
162
392083
2643
06:34
we have found three or four new species
163
394750
1893
06:36
because these are places that have been isolated for billions of years
164
396667
3309
06:40
and no human being has ever been down there to film them
165
400000
3351
06:43
or take samples.
166
403375
1268
06:44
And so this is extraordinary for us --
167
404667
1851
06:46
(Applause)
168
406542
2351
06:48
So what we are hoping --
169
408917
1309
06:50
the main objective of our mission is to build this tool.
170
410250
3351
06:53
This tool is a door,
171
413625
1643
06:55
because with this tool,
172
415292
1309
06:56
we'll be able to make more of them potentially
173
416625
2184
06:58
and take scientists down to do thousands of dives,
174
418833
2351
07:01
to open that door to exploration
175
421208
2226
07:03
and find things that we had no idea even existed.
176
423458
3060
07:06
DB: And so more people have been to space than the bottom of the ocean.
177
426542
4892
07:11
You're one of three.
178
431458
1643
07:13
You're going to up that number, you're going to give it away.
179
433125
2893
07:16
VV: Yeah, three people have dived to the bottom of the Pacific Ocean.
180
436042
3267
07:19
The USS Trieste in 1960 with two individuals.
181
439333
2143
07:21
James Cameron in 2012 with his Deep Sea Challenger --
182
441500
2518
07:24
thank you, Jim, great sub.
183
444042
1559
07:25
This is a third-generation technology.
184
445625
1851
07:27
We're not only going to try and go down, actually in two weeks,
185
447500
2976
07:30
but we're going to try and do it multiple times,
186
450500
2268
07:32
which has never been done before.
187
452792
1601
07:34
If we can do that, we'll have proven the technology
188
454417
2434
07:36
and that door will not just go open, it will stay open.
189
456875
2601
07:39
(Applause)
190
459500
3268
07:42
DB: Fantastic. Good luck.
191
462792
1309
07:44
VV: Thank you very much. DB: Thank you.
192
464125
1851
07:46
VV: Thank you all.
193
466000
1268
07:47
(Applause)
194
467292
2541
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7