
.
.Jacques
PICCARD
Jacques Piccard
(28 July 1922 – 1 November 2008) was a Swiss oceanographer and
engineer, known for having developed underwater vehicles for
studying ocean currents. He is one of only two people, along with
Lt. Don Walsh of the United States Navy, to have explored the
deepest part of the world's ocean, and the deepest location on the
surface of the Earth's crust, the Challenger Deep, in the Mariana
Trench located in the western North Pacific Ocean.
Family life
Jacques Piccard was born in
Brussels, Belgium to
Auguste Piccard, who was himself an adventurer and engineer.
Jacques' father
Auguste Piccard twice beat the record for reaching the highest
altitude in a balloon, during 1931-1932. The Piccard family thus
has the unique distinction of having made both the highest flight
and the deepest dive of all time.
-
Auguste Piccard (physicist, aeronaut, balloonist, hydronaut)
- Jacques Piccard (hydronaut)
-
Jean Felix Piccard (organic chemist, aeronaut, and
balloonist)
-
Jeannette Piccard (wife of Jean Felix) (aeronaut and
balloonist)
Jacques' father, who had already set altitude records in his
balloon, started using the buoyancy technique used in balloons for
developing a
submersible vehicle, the
bathyscaphe. Jacques initially started out his career by
teaching economics at University of Geneva while continuing
helping his father improve the bathyscaphe to demonstrate its
potential for operating in deep waters. Together they built three
bathyscaphes between 1948 and 1955, which reached record depths of
4,600 feet and 10,000 feet (the last one was bought by the
government). With this success, the younger Piccard abandoned
economics to collaborate with his father on further improving the
bathyscaphe and demonstrating its practicality for exploration and
research.
Jacques' son
Bertrand Piccard is continuing his family traditions. He
commanded the first nonstop balloon flight around the world during
March 1999.
Challenger
Deep mission
Jacques sought financial help from the U.S. Navy, which at that
time was exploring various ways for designing submarines for
underwater research. Jacques was welcomed to the U.S. to
demonstrate his bathyscaphe, now named the
Trieste. Impressed by his designs, the
U.S. Navy bought the vessel and hired Piccard as a consultant.
Recognizing the strategic value of a workable submersible for
submarine salvage and rescue, the Navy began testing the
Trieste for greater depths.
With his Trieste able to reach depths of 24,000 feet,
Piccard and his colleagues planned on an even greater challenge —
a voyage to the bottom of the sea. On 23 January 1960, Piccard and
Lt.
Don Walsh reached the floor of the
Mariana Trench located in the western North Pacific Ocean. The
depth of the descent was measured at 10,916 meters (35,813 feet);
later, more accurate, measurements during 1995 found the Mariana
Trench to be slightly less deep at 10,911 m (35,797 ft). The
descent took almost five hours. The bathyscaphe carried no
scientific equipment and no experiments were conducted; the
mission's purpose was merely to prove that the depth could be
reached. The descent progressed without incident until 30,000
feet, when the crew heard a loud crack. They continued the dive,
however, finally touching down in "snuff-colored ooze" at 35,800
feet.
When they reached the featureless seabed, they saw a flat fish
as well as a new type of shrimp. Marine biologists later disputed
their observations, claiming that no fish could survive the 17,000
psi pressure at such depths. Upon discovering cracks in the
viewing windows, Piccard cut the voyage short. After only a
20-minute stay on the bottom, they began dumping ballast for their
return to the surface, and the damaged vessel returned to its
escort ships without incident in three hours and 15 minutes.
The historic dive received worldwide attention, and Piccard
wrote an account of it, Seven Miles Down, with Robert
Deitz, a renowned geologist who had helped plan the mission. A
planned return expedition, however, never occurred. The Trieste
was expensive to maintain and operate. It was incapable of
collecting samples and could not take photographs and so had
little scientific data to show for its voyages. The original
vessel was retired during 1961, although a rebuilt version later
located the remains of two lost U.S. Navy nuclear submarines, the
Thresher and the
Scorpion.
Ben
Franklin mission
On 14 July 1969, just two days before the
Apollo 11 launch, the
Ben Franklin, also known as the Grumman/Piccard PX-15
mesoscaphe, was towed to the high-velocity center of the
Gulf Stream off the coast of
Palm Beach, Florida. Once on site, the Ben Franklin
with its six-man, international crew descended to 1,000 feet off
of Riviera Beach, Florida and drifted 1,444 miles north with the
current for more than four weeks, surfacing near Maine.
A crew of six was chosen. Jacques Piccard was the mission
leader; Erwin Aebersold, another Swiss, was Piccard’s handpicked
pilot and main assistant to Piccard and project engineer during
the Franklin's design and construction.
Grumman selected a Navy submariner named Don Kazimir to be
captain. The U.S. Navy Oceanographic Office sent Frank Busby to
conduct a bottom survey along the drift track over the
Continental Shelf and the
Royal Navy sent Ken Haigh, an acoustic specialist, who studied
underwater acoustics and performed sonic experiments up and down
the water column throughout the mission. The sixth man was Chet
May from
NASA. His specialty was "man working in space".
Wernher von Braun learned about the Franklin mission, visited
the submarine in Palm Beach, and considered the mission a kind of
analogue to a prolonged mission in space, such as on the
forthcoming
Skylab. He appointed May as a NASA observer to accompany the
mission and study the effects of prolonged isolation on the human
crew.
Named for the American patriot and inventor who was one of the
first to chart the
Gulf Stream, the 50-foot Ben Franklin was built between
1966 and 1968 high in the mountains in Switzerland for Piccard and
the
Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation. It has been restored
and resides now in the Vancouver Maritime Museum in Vancouver,
Canada.
Influence and distinctions
Ambient artists Mathieu Ruhlmann and
Celer collaboratively released an album called Mesoscaphe
during 2008, dedicated to the voyage of the Ben Franklin.
He was awarded the
Howard N. Potts Medal in 1972.
On 1 February 2008, Piccard was honored
Doctor honoris causa at the Catholic University of Louvain
(Louvain-la-Neuve), Belgium.
Other activities
Piccard was the founder of the Foundation for the Study and
Protection of Seas and Lakes, based in
Cully, Switzerland.
Jacques Piccard constructed four submarines and applied for at
least one US patent (D200,506) for a submarine:
- Auguste Piccard, the world's first passenger
submarine
-
Ben Franklin (PX-15)
- F.-A. Forel
- PX-44
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