Archive for the ‘Undergraduate Operations’ Category
Continuing the Challenger dream!
Tuesday, September 27th, 2011Hey everyone! We will be working on planning the next leg of the Challenger mission! The plan is to fly a glider from Great Abaco Island of The Bahamas east to Gran Canaria along 26.5 N. 26.5 N is a very important area to understand regarding heat transport, and therefore will be an integral line of the Challenger mission.
-Dave, Jason, & Katrina
Team Azores / Canarys
Monday, September 26th, 2011Our group’s (Mario, Heather, Connor, and Oliver) objective is to monitor the conditions of the Azores and the Canary Islands. We will be looking at approaching storms, currents, shipping traffic, and possible points of retrieval and cleaning.
Antarctica Chlorophyll
Monday, September 26th, 2011Hey Everyone,
Our group is going to be looking at chlorophyll concentrations near Palmer Station in Antarctica. We are going to begin by analyzing data from the last 20 years. We are going to be finding the yearly averages as well as maximum concentrations for each month. We will also be looking at nutrient data gathered during the last 20 years to try and determine what is driving chlorophyll concentrations.
-Kyle, Evan, Thomas, Alicia,Rhea
Temperature Analysis of Silbo
Monday, September 26th, 2011Hey all,
This week we took a look at the synoptic temperature data for the first leg of the challenger mission.
Chris pointed out that we can see as the remnants of Hurricane Irene came through, reverberations could be felt all the way down to nearly 400m. This could be a result of the strong winds that caused a mixing effect.
Holly added that at depths of 1000m for the first half of the mission (from deployment on 6/23-8/22), the temperature was down around 6°C. However, after this point, something seems to have happened where the water started mixing much lower causing the waters at depth to become warmer.
Jess also took a step back and looked at the big picture analyzing the data from the entire mission. She noted that when the glider was deployed off of Iceland, the waters were not very stratified and that only the surface waters reflected a warming effect from the sun. As silbo continues south, the water has become more stratified and the depths to which the warmer temperatures reach has continued to go deeper.
Finally I would like to add that as we have gone through this mission, silbo has been really relying on the currents from the large number of eddies to make his progress south (unfortunately they have not always been completely useful). These eddies have a gyring effect and the warm, clockwise spinning eddies can be seen quite clearly on this cross section. Each cone shaped heat anomaly represents one of the warm eddies that we crossed throughout this mission. As we can see, since about Sept 20th, there has been a very intense heat flux into the depths that has almost reached to 1000m. This is the warm eddy we have been battling for about the past week that has produced some of the strongest currents we have seen over the course of the entire mission.
For next week we will start playing with pro plot and getting the silbo data into matlab to plot individual dives.
Chris, Holly, Jess, Eva & Nilsen
Ughh So Much MATLAB
Monday, September 26th, 2011Hi Everyone!
We are the Glider Ops team for this semester. We are going to be looking at the glider data for the West Antarctic Peninsula from last year's field season at Palmer Station. Our main goal is to look at the gliders that were deployed in the canyons (RU05, RU21, RU24, RU25d, and UD-134). Our first task is to map these glider tracks using MATLAB and also to look at the variability in the thermocline.
Cheers,
Amanda, Amelia, Collin, Cynthia and Tejas
Polar Weather
Tuesday, September 20th, 2011This semester our group will be studying the Polar weather. We will be plotting weather anomalies data including wind, sun, and clouds. We will also be looking at tide and CTD data.
A piece of plankton poetry. ht…
Tuesday, August 16th, 2011A piece of plankton poetry. http://t.co/16VOQH0
Several years ago, James Camer…
Monday, August 15th, 2011Several years ago, James Cameron collaborated with IMCS Director Rich Lutz and Professor Peter Rona on the film... http://t.co/wvErpIr
Ocean sediments may not be gol…
Friday, August 12th, 2011Ocean sediments may not be gold, or even Fool's Gold, but to oceanographers in the Gulf, they're still priceless. http://t.co/8mAGRiO

