June 2024 OES Beacon

The IEEE OES Thirteenth Currents, Waves, and Turbulence (CWTM) Workshop

Weimin Huang and Mal Heron, CWTM Technical Program Co-chairs

Figure 1. Group photo in front of the CSI building.

The IEEE OES Thirteenth Current, Wave and Turbulence Measurement (CWTM) Workshop was successfully hosted at the Coastal Studies Institute (CSI, see Fig. 1), East Carolina University, Wanchese, NC, USA, during 17-20 March 2024. The CWTM Workshop is a four-yearly international workshop organized by the CWTMA Technology Committee, and it provides the ocean community with a great forum for technical information exchange and to promote coordination among those interested in measuring current, waves and turbulence, and their applications. This has been a very successful series with technical presentations, an integrated industry exhibition and papers archived in IEEE Xplore. The 12th CWTM Workshop was held on 10-13 March, 2019, in San Diego. For various reasons, including the COVID-19 pandemic, the most recent one was delayed by one year. This workshop consists of eight regular sessions, one panel session and one exhibitor presentation session. 47 registered for the workshop.

The atmosphere became lively with the Icebreaker reception at the Pioneer Theatre in Manteo where old friends and new faces of CWTM reunited, as shown in Fig. 2.

Figure 2. Icebreaker reception night at Pioneer Theatre.

CWTM 2024 received 33 technical abstracts and 29 of them were scheduled into eight regular sessions focusing on five themes (currents, waves, turbulence, sensors and other CWTM topics). Each presentation raised friendly and heated discussions (see Fig. 3). The Best Paper Award was based on the research novelty and quality in both abstract and presentation and went to the paper “Enhancing the Versatility of a 4-beam ADCP: Horizontal Use Case” authored by Lorraine Heilman, Robert Heitsenrether, Shaena Rausch, Edward Roggenstein and Evan Price, and was accepted by Lorraine (see Fig. 4). Two honorable mention awards went to “Distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) of seafloor fiber optic cables enables meter-scale resolution of surface waves in the coastal ocean” (authors: Maddie Smith, Jim Thomson, Hannah Glover, Meagan Wengrove, Michael Baker, Rob Abbott, Jacob Davis, Seth Zippel, and Wenbo Wu) and “The Next Wave: Buoy Arrays for Deterministic Wave Prediction in Real-time” by Jim Thomson, Alex Fisher and Curtis Rusch.

Figure 3. Attendees enjoying keynote speech given by Michael Muglia.

The panel session was dedicated to the promotion of UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development (UNDOSSD). The panelists included Michelle Barnett, Eric Gill, Mal Heron, Weimin Huang, and Jim Thomson (see the article “Decade of Ocean Science in the CWTM 2024 Workshop” in this newsletter for more information). IEEE OES provided two Ocean Decade Scholarships to students and Postdocs to support their participation in CWTM 2024. Five students were selected as the finalists: Joe Craig (Memorial University), Jacob Davis (University of Washington), Brendan Henley (Rutgers University), Elias Marchetti (University of Plymouth), Zhiding Yang (Memorial University). Jacob and Brendan were awarded the scholarships. The recognition was announced at the workshop Gala in the North Carolina Aquarium Jennette’s Pier (see Fig. 5).

CWTM 2024 promotes the merging of Academic, Engineering and Manufacturing aspects of Current, Waves and Turbulence Measurement. Eight companies and IEEE OES (see Fig. 6) secured their exhibition booths, and they are also generous sponsors for the workshop. The Exhibitor Presentation session offered the sponsors/exhibitors the podium for 15 minutes to showcase their commercial products, test data or field operations and in-person discussions.

Figure 4. Lorraine Heilman receiving the Best CWTM Paper Award from the Technical Program Co-Chairs Mal Heron and Weimin Huang.

At the workshop, Mal Heron, with input from Sandy Williams and Hugh Roarty, gave a review of the history along with the statistics data of CWTM workshops. Although the number of attendees has fluctuated over the years, there has been consistent exhibitor support. During Mal’s presentation, the audience also had an amusing discussion about the seven-legged octopus in the CWTM cartoon (as shown in Fig. 7). This important matter dates back to the 1st CMT Workshop in 1978.

Feedback from delegates and exhibitors indicated that CWTM 2024 was a resounding success. The next CWTM Workshop is pencilled in for 2027.

Exhibitors were:

  • Teledyne Marine
  • Helzel Messtechnik
  • Pacific Gyre
  • AXYS
  • Nortek
  • Flynn Technical Solutions
  • Severn Marine Technologies
  • IEEE-OES
  • Figure 5. Gala and Awards Dinner at Jennette’s Pier.
    Figure 6. Weimin Huang and Mal Heron at the OES booth.
    Figure 7. CWTM cartoon.