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High Resolution XBT/XCTD Network Site - SIO (ODIS id: 3237)

This resource is online Last check was 04/05/2024 03:34
First entry: 29/11/2021 Last update: 29/11/2021
Submitter/Owner of this record Mr. Cristian Muñoz Mas ( OceanExpert : 30291 )
Submitter/Owner Role IODE Secretariat
Datasource URL http://www-hrx.ucsd.edu/
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ODIS-Arch Type Sitemap
English name High Resolution XBT/XCTD Network Site - SIO
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Citation We would like to know of any publications resulting from the HRX data, for inclusion in the bibliography, and we ask that the program be acknowledged in publications, e.g. "Data were made available by the Scripps High Resolution XBT program (www-hrx.ucsd.edu)". Please email your publication information to: web@www-hrx.ucsd.edu.
Abstract Repeat high resolution expendable Bathythermograph (XBT) transects have been collected along a number of commercial shipping routes spanning the Pacific Ocean, the Drake Passage, and Tasmania to Dumont d'Urville. On each of the transects generally four surveys are conducted per year. Temperature data are usually collected by a scientist on board the vessel using an automatic XBT launcher designed at Scripps Institution of Oceanography (SIO). The launcher holds 6 XBT probes which are pre-programmed to drop at specific locations (using GPS) or times. The XBT probes are Sippican "Deep Blue", which are rated to 760 m depth, but typically return temperature to a depth of around 850 m at ship speeds of 15 to 18 knots. Sequential XBT casts are separated by 30-40 km along track, with closer station spacings of 10 km near boundaries, across the equator and in topographically varying regions. Sampling begins and ends near the 200 m isobath at the coastal endpoints of the tracks. Prior to 1994 profiles were collected using a modified analog-to-digital (A/D) conversion board as described by Roemmich and Cornuelle (1987). From 1994 through 2004 a Sippican MK12 data acquisition system was employed, with the modification of the user interface driver programs. These programs were developed at SIO to provide a more user-friendly environment for the ship board data collectors, and to eventually enable collection by non-scientific personnel such as the ship's crew. Profiles are currently collected using AMVER SEAS 2K Windows based software and the Sippican MK21 data acquisition system. AMVER SEAS 2K was developed by NOAA's Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory (AOML). It incorporates many of SIO's older data acquisition functions. See the poster page for a description of AMVER SEAS 2K.
Host institution of the resource Scripps Institution of Oceanography
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