Title :
Enabling discovery based science with Webb Gliders
Author :
Schofield, Oscar ; Kohut, Josh ; Roarty, Hugh ; Glenn, Scott ; Jones, Clayton ; Webb, Doug
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Environ. & Biol. Sci., Rutgers Univ., New Brunswick, NJ
Abstract :
Buoyancy driven Slocum Gliders were a vision of Douglas Webb, which Henry Stommel championed in a futuristic vision published in 1989. Slocum Gliders have transitioned from a concept to a technology serving basic research and environmental stewardship. The long duration and low operating costs of Gliders allow them to anchor spatial time series. Large distances, over 600 kilometers, can be covered using a single set of alkaline batteries. Since the initial tests, a wide range of physical and optical sensors have been integrated into the Glider allowing measurements of temperature, salinity, depth averaged currents, surface currents, fluorescence, apparent and inherent optical properties. The ability to operate Gliders for extended periods of time are making them the central in situ technology for the evolving ocean observatories. Off shore New Jersey Gliders have occupied a cross shelf transect and have documented the annual variability in shelf wide stratification on the Mid-Atlantic Bight and the role of storms in sediment resuspension. The sustained data permit scientists to gather regional data critical to addressing if, and how, the oceans are changing. One of next major regions we will use this technology is to study the climate induced impacts on the food webs along the West Antarctic Peninsula.
Keywords :
oceanographic equipment; oceanographic techniques; remotely operated vehicles; underwater vehicles; Glider integrated optical sensors; Glider integrated physical sensors; Glider operation; New Jersey; Slocum Gliders; Webb Gliders; alkaline batteries; apparent optical property measurements; depth averaged current measurements; discovery based science; fluorescence measurements; inherent optical property measurements; mid-Atlantic bight; ocean food webs; ocean observatories; salinity measurements; sediment resuspension; shelf wide stratification annual variability; spatial time series; storms; surface current measurements; temperature measurements; west Antarctic peninsula; Battery charge measurement; Costs; Current measurement; Marine technology; Ocean temperature; Optical sensors; Sea measurements; Temperature distribution; Temperature measurement; Testing;
Conference_Titel :
US/EU-Baltic International Symposium, 2008 IEEE/OES
Conference_Location :
Tallinn
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2267-8
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2268-5
DOI :
10.1109/BALTIC.2008.4625486