A plan has been officially presented to build the world's deepest swimming pool in Cornwall, England. The pool, which is being built by the company Blue Abyss, will be used to train astronauts and develop underwater robots.
The Aerohub Enterprise Zone at Cornwall airport will house the pool, which may cost £150 million to build. It will be 40 metres wide and 50 metres deep. For comparison, Nelsons Column in Trafalgar Square in London is 52 metres tall. So this pool would almost be as deep as the column is tall. It will also be the world's largest pool by volume (容积), containing enough water to fill 17 Olympic-sized swimming pools.
The pool will be covered by a roof which can be easily removed and a 30-tonne crane (起重机) will lower heavy objects into it. These could include film sets and restaurants of the International Space Station (ISS). Training astronauts is going to be one of the pool's main uses. Astronauts train in swimming pools because moving underwater is similar to being weightless in space.
Astronaut Tim Peake said, "This project will help us to widen our knowledge of how humans and technology can work in extreme environments for the benefit of people and the planet. " In 2015, Peake became the first British astronaut to board the ISS, and in 2016, he became the first British astronaut to go on a spacewalk.
John Vickers, who is the head of Blue Abyss and a former army diving instructor, came up with the idea for the pool. As well as having research and training purposes, he says the pool will be "a fantastic education centre for children and university students".
Blue Abyss says the pool could create up to 160 jobs and bring in £ 8 million a year for the local economy. The pool is scheduled to open in 2023.