Teledyne staff members Clara Hulburt, Shea Quinn, and Clayton Jones delivered an informative and historical talk about Mr. Webb’s legacy as an engineer, scientist, innovator, and world changer.
Mr. Webb contributed significantly to developing low-frequency acoustic sound sources such as SOFAR, RAFOS, and Tonpilz for water mass tracking, long-range navigation, and tomography. He played a key role in the development of Vertical Current Meters (VCMs) to measure water chimney convection and profiling floats (ALACE). He commercialized this development (APEX) which became part of the ARGO program. He invented and developed the Teledyne Slocum gliders. Mr. Webb pioneered the development of the buoyancy systems used in these floats and gliders, revolutionizing how scientists approach ocean data gathering. Argo is the most successful ocean observing program, contributing critical information about climate and sea level change.
Standing Left to Right: Karl Boettger, Brian Maguire, Shea Quinn, Clayton Jones, Clara Hulburt, Kathi Sheehan and Andrey Morozov. Sitting: Doug Webb. (Image credit: Teledyne)
Mr. Webb was also honored by Rutgers University’s undergraduate class of 2024 with a letter of appreciation after the Rutgers University Center for Ocean Observing Leadership (RUCOOL) received the 2024 TOS Ocean Observing Award for innovation and excellence in sustained ocean observation at the 2024 Ocean Sciences Meeting, which was held in New Orleans, LA.
Following the presentation, Mr. Webb proceeded to tour the Teledyne Marine facility and was given an up-close view of REDWING (Research and Education Doug Webb Inter-National Glider), the Slocum Sentinel glider named in his honor what is about to commence the first-ever global circumnavigation by a subsea glider later this year.