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News

WATER: Floating robots use GPS-enabled smartphones to track water flow, help water management

Details
Written by: Sarah Yang
Published: 10 May 2012

A fleet of 100 floating robots took a trip down the Sacramento River on Wednesday, May May 9, in a field test organized by engineers at the University of California, Berkeley.

The smartphone-equipped floating robots demonstrated the next generation of water monitoring technology, promising to transform the way government agencies monitor one of the state's most precious resources.

The Floating Sensor Network project, led by associate professor Alexandre Bayen, a researcher at the Center for Information Technology Research in the Interest of Society (CITRIS), offers a network of mobile sensors that can be deployed rapidly to provide real-time, high-resolution data in hard-to-map waterways.

One area that stands to benefit from this technology is the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, with its complex network of channels that direct drinking water to two-thirds of California's population and irrigation water for 3 million acres of agriculture. Water from Clear Lake empties into the Delta.

Having a high volume of sensors moving through the water can shed light on processes that are influenced by how water moves, such as the spread of pollutants, the migration of salmon or the mixture of salt and fresh water in the Delta's ecosystem, the researchers said.

Wednesday's field test gave researchers a picture of how water moves through a junction in the river with a resolution never before achieved.

"We are putting water online," said Bayen, who holds joint appointments in UC Berkeley's departments of electrical engineering and computer sciences and of civil and environmental engineering.

"Monitoring the state's water supply is critical for the general public, water researchers and government agencies, which now rely upon costly fixed water sensor stations that don't always generate sufficient data for modeling and prediction,” Bayen said. “The mobile probes we are using could potentially expand coverage in the Delta – on demand – to hundreds of miles of natural and manmade channels that are currently under-monitored, and help agencies responsible for managing the state's limited water supply."

Such a flexible system could be critical in the event of an emergency, including a levee breach or oil spill, the researchers noted.

The sensors could be thrown into action from a dock, shore, boats or even helicopters.

"If something spills in the water, if there's a contaminant, you need to know where it is now, you need to know where it's going, you need to know where it will be later on," said Andrew Tinka, a Ph.D. candidate in electrical engineering and computer sciences and the lead graduate student on the project. "The Floating Sensor Network project can help by tracking water flow at a level of detail not currently possible."

The Wednesday launch in Walnut Grove, Calif., marked a milestone in the project, which is supported by CITRIS and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab).

It was the first time researchers deployed their full arsenal of floats, each equipped with GPS-enabled mobile phones encased in 12-inch-long watertight capsules marked with fluorescent tape.

The researchers wrote specific programs to run on the open source platforms used in the robots and on the smartphones.

The project is an evolution of earlier research led by Bayen called Mobile Century and Mobile Millennium, which uses GPS-enabled smartphones to monitor traffic flow.

Instead of a map of traffic, the Floating Century mobile probes created a map of water flow.

Every few seconds, the phones in the floats transmitted location data back to servers at Berkeley Lab's National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC), where the data was assimilated using a computer model called REALM (River, Estuary and Land Model).

Information was processed to create a map that allowed researchers to track the devices on their computer monitors.

"Not only is this project interesting from a data collection perspective, but it also presents a new challenge for us on the data processing side," said Shane Canon, head of the Technology Integration Group at NERSC. "While the total amount of data is not unusual, the streaming rate is higher than we usually see, and the researchers are looking to access the data in near real-time."

The REALM model was developed by researchers at the Berkeley Lab and the California Department of Water Resources. It was later expanded to integrate data from mobile robots by Qingfang Wu, a UC Berkeley graduate student in civil and environmental engineering.

"Part of the novelty of this project is the use of the NERSC computer cluster to run large-scale data assimilation problems," said Wu. "The floating sensor project demands the ability to process hundreds of parallel versions of REALM and integrate the results into an estimate of the hydrodynamics of the Delta."

Although the sensors in the test were set up to monitor the speed of water currents, the researchers said the floats could be equipped with sensors for a variety of measurements, including temperature, salinity, or a contaminant of interest.

Of the 100 floats in the fleet, 40 were autonomous devices fitted with propellers to help them move around obstacles or targeted areas.

"The major constraint on floating sensors in inland environments is their tendency to get stuck on the shores," said Tinka. "Currently, using floating sensors requires close human supervision. We are developing autonomous, actuated sensors that can use propulsion to avoid obstacles."

The Floating Sensor Network's fleet of robots includes prototypes with advanced capabilities, including models that can dive below the surface of the water, versions equipped with salinity sensors to measure the water quality in rivers, and versions with depth sensors that can map out the shape of the channels in which they float.

"Our development efforts show the versatility of this technology and how it can adapt to the challenges faced in different applications," said Bayen.  "For example, the capability to measure depth is particularly important in situations where it is impractical or dangerous to send personnel to do the job, such as in military operations in combat zones. Floating sensor fleets also provide capabilities which can be used to improve our understanding of the shape of domestic rivers and deltas."

The floating sensor network has been tested in collaboration with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to assess water discharge downstream from broken levees. The researchers are also planning a deployment to monitor the ecosystem of Lake Tahoe in the coming months.

Floats are retrieved at the end of experiments, but the researchers acknowledged the possibility that devices can get lost. The researchers said they expect the expense of individual sensors to go down with continuing advances in mobile communications so that the system can better tolerate a certain level of device dropout.

"In the future, cost and size will go down, while performance and autonomy will go up, enabling monitoring at unprecedented scales," said Bayen. "We expect this to become an invaluable tool for the future management of a critical resource in this state and around the world."

Visit the Floating Sensor Network at http://float.berkeley.edu/ for more information on the program.

Sarah Yang writes for the UC Berkeley News Center.

Clearlake man arrested for stabbing two people, including ex-girlfriend

Details
Written by: Lake County News reports
Published: 09 May 2012

CLEARLAKE, Calif. – A Clearlake man was arrested Tuesday morning for allegedly stabbing his ex-girlfriend and a man in a homeless encampment.

Anthony Kropaczewski, 42, was arrested in the case, according to a report from Det. Ryan Peterson of the Clearlake Police Department.

Peterson reported that Clearlake Police officers on Tuesday responded to the area of Ray’s Food Place on the report of a male and female in a verbal fight. Witnesses reported that the female appeared to have blood on her face.  

Once officers arrived they located a female, identified as 29-year-old Rachel Patterson of Clearlake, who advised officers that she had been stabbed in the stomach in the homeless encampment behind Ray’s Food Place. Patterson identified the person who stabbed her as Kropaczewski, her ex-boyfriend, Peterson reported.

Lake County Fire medical personnel arrived and transported Patterson to St. Helena Hospital Clearlake for medical treatment. She subsequently was flown via REACH air ambulance to Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital due to the injuries, according to Peterson's report. Patterson later was released from Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital after she was medically treated.  

During the investigation, Peterson said police officers were advised by a bystander that a second possible stabbing victim was located in the same homeless encampment where Patterson had been assaulted.

Officers responded and located 31-year-old Clearlake resident Brian Fitzke. Peterson said Lake County Fire medical personnel responded to attend to Fitzke’s injuries, which were determined not to be life threatening and he was not transported to a medical facility.  

Fitzke also identified Kropaczewski as the person who had stabbed him, Peterson said.

Kropaczewski was located and detained at his residence. After in-field lineups were conducted and statements from witnesses were obtained, Kropaczewski was placed under arrest for violations including criminal threats, domestic violence, assault with a deadly weapon and possession of a concealed dagger, according to Peterson.

With Kropaczewski’s assistance, the knife used in this incident was located and booked into evidence at the Clearlake Police Department, Peterson said.

Anyone with information in regard to this incident is requested to contact Peterson at the Clearlake Police Department, 707-994-8251.

Man falls from sailboat, found after spending several hours in Clear Lake

Details
Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 09 May 2012

LAKEPORT, Calif. – An elderly Lakeport man had to be flown to a regional trauma center for treatment Tuesday night after falling from his sailboat and spending several hours in Clear Lake.

The 77-year-old man, whose name was not released, was found by paramedics in tules near Konocti Vista Casino’s marina at around 9:30 p.m. Tuesday, according to Dan Copas, a firefighter/paramedic with Lakeport Fire Protection District.

About an hour before the man was located firefighters and sheriff’s deputies were dispatched to the casino on the report of a subject in the water near the marina.

Copas said nine Lakeport Fire personnel, along with an engine and two medic units, responded to the scene to look for the man.

Copas said the man had launched his sailboat between 4 p.m. and 4:30 p.m. with his daughter’s help, then went sailing by himself.

The circumstances that led to the man falling into the water aren’t entirely clear, but Copas said the information emergency personnel received indicated that a rope on one of the boat’s sails broke and the man went to fix it.

From there, they aren’t sure if he was knocked into the water or lost his balance and fell, Copas said.

“He was out there for an extended period of time,” said Copas.

Just how long he was in the water wasn’t certain, but Copas estimated four to five hours.

The man’s daughter went looking for him, found him and tried unsuccessfully to get him into her boat, Copas said.

She then tried to drag her father’s sailboat to shore, which Copas said also didn’t work.

Next, the woman gave her father a rope and towed him to shore. Copas said she somehow managed to get 150 feet into the tules, near a tree. She tied a life vest in the area as a marker.

“So we ended up finding him in the tules in about a foot of water, lying down,” said Copas.

Copas and two others got out of the sheriff’s boat being used in the search and swam through the water and tules to reach the man.

It took them quite a while to locate the man, Copas said.

“We had to find our way to him because he was not visible from the water at all,” Copas said.

When they did find him he was hypothermic, Copas said.

Paramedics got the man to shore at Konocti Vista, and Copas said the man was flown by REACH air ambulance to Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital.

There was no word on his condition Wednesday.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

UPDATE: Vehicle driver in Tuesday crash with motorcycle arrested for DUI

Details
Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 09 May 2012

LUCERNE, Calif. – A Lucerne woman whose vehicle collided with a motorcycle in Lucerne Tuesday night has been arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence.

Jolyn Jennifer Johnson, 31, was arrested after being treated at Sutter Lakeside Hospital for injuries she received in the wreck, which the California Highway Patrol said occurred at 8:45 p.m. Tuesday.

Johnson hit a 2003 Harley Davidson motorcycle ridden by Orland residents Bobby Glen Hendry Jr., 33, and Terra Noel England, 24, injuring both, the CHP said.

The CHP report said Johnson was driving her 2004 Infiniti eastbound on Highway 20. As she was making a left turn onto Oak Crest Avenue she pulled directly into the path of the motorcycle, driven by Hendry.

Hendry was unable to avoid the collision and the right front of Johnson’s Infiniti hit the front of the motorcycle, the CHP said.

The crash’s impact caused both Hendry and England to be thrown from the motorcycle and into the westbound lane of traffic, according to the CHP report.

Two air ambulances landed at Lucerne Harbor Park and transported Hendry and England to Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital for treatment of moderate injuries, the CHP reported.

The CHP said Hendry was knocked unconscious, and suffered a laceration to his left knee and abrasions. England had a fractured right arm, and complained of pain to her left leg and hip.

Johnson was transported to Sutter Lakeside Hospital where she was treated for neck and back pain, the CHP said. She subsequently was arrested for DUI.

The crash in Lucerne was one of two serious wrecks occurring in the county on Tuesday night, both involving allegations of driving under the influence.

An earlier crash near Hidden Valley Lake claimed the life of 19-year-old Leah Hernandez of Clearlake, as Lake County News has reported.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

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