Glider Reachability Map
Forecast for 15 Apr 0000Z to 22 Apr 0000Z 2025, Issued 14 Apr 2025

In the first panel, the black contours shown are reachability front forecasts, at 6 hour intervals (with increasing line thickness for later times). The reachability front is the boundary of the largest set (the reachable set) that the glider can reach within that duration. It is computed by numerically solving our exact governing PDE for this time-optimal reachability front. The time-optimal path from the starting postion to the desired recovery position is shown by the purple curve.

In the second panel we show a zoom of the optimal path along with the reachability fronts and heading/velocity data along the optimal path. The red vectors are the optimal vehicle headings; the blue vectors, the current; and the green vectors, the resultant (sum of the current vector and propulsion vector in the heading direction).

In the third panel, the optimal heading angle (degrees, measured clockwise from true north) vs. time is shown. Note that time is plotted on the y-axis (so the starting time is on the bottom).

The fourth panel also shows the optimal heading angle with time, as a polar plot with time on the r-axis.

The final target point for the time-optimal path forecast is the center of the Tortugas Eddy provided by the MSEAS ocean forecast on April 22 0Z. We also issued a forecast using the eddy center based on the Woods Hole Group SST data for April 13; click here for details.

GRASE Sea Exercise Main Page

Speed (cm/s)Level Sets and Time-Optimal PathTime-Optimal Path with Headings, Current,
and Resultant Vectors
Optimal Headings vs. Time
Rectangular
50 sp1_vel50_path.png
sp1_vel50_path_with_current.png
sp1_vel50_headings.png
40 sp1_vel40_path.png
sp1_vel40_path_with_current.png
sp1_vel40_headings.png
30 sp1_vel30_path.png
sp1_vel30_path_with_current.png
sp1_vel30_headings.png
20 sp1_vel20_path.png
sp1_vel20_path_with_current.png
sp1_vel20_headings.png