Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8060448 | Methods in Oceanography | 2014 | 18 Pages |
Abstract
An experimental deployment of a new type of unmanned vessel is presented. The Christian Michelsen Research SailBuoy, a remotely-controlled surface vehicle, sampled near-surface properties during a two-month mission in the northern Gulf of Mexico in March-May, 2013. Averaged over the entire deployment, the vessel speed over ground was 42±30cm sâ1 (± one standard deviation) with a maximum of 180cm sâ1. During the 62 days of the mission, the SailBuoy covered a total range of approximately 400 km in both meridional and zonal directions, with a cumulative total distance of approximately 2400 km. Three parameters were recorded: sea surface temperature, conductivity, and dissolved oxygen. Observed surface temperature and salinity records are compared with remote sensing data and the salinity fields from a regional ocean modeling system, respectively. The absolute difference between remote sensing data to surface temperature is on an average approximately 0.5 °C. The comparison with the full Gulf of Mexico and the nested Northern Gulf of Mexico HYCOM models demonstrates the validity and usefulness of SailBuoy measurements and the instrument's utility in evaluating fields produced by ocean models having different attributes. The potential of the SailBuoy for mapping a large-scale river plume, which would be challenging or costly with conventional ship surveys and/or remote sensing, is demonstrated.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Oceanography
Authors
Mahmud Hasan Ghani, Lars R. Hole, Ilker Fer, Vassiliki H. Kourafalou, Nicolas Wienders, HeeSook Kang, Kyla Drushka, David Peddie,