DocumentCode
2909620
Title
CMICE 76: A current meter intercomparison experiment conducted off Long Island in February-March 1976
Author
Beardsley, Robert ; Boicourt, William ; Scott, Jon ; Huff, Lloyd C.
Author_Institution
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA, USA
Volume
1
fYear
1978
fDate
28491
Firstpage
153
Lastpage
155
Abstract
A current meter intercomparison experiment (called CMICE 76) was conducted about 6 km off the southern coast of Long Island near
47\´N,
30\´W during February and March, 1976. A total of 20 current meters were deployed on six moorings set in a roughly linear array parallel to the local coastline and topography. The instruments included the Aanderaa RCM-4, the AMF VACM, the Brookhaven National Laboratory spar buoy system using cylindrical and spherical Marsh-McBirney electromagnetic sensors, the EG&G 850 and CT-3, and the Chesapeake Bay Institute-modified ENDECO 105. Local mean water depth was 27.8 m and current meters were clustered near four depth levels (3.5 m, 7.4 m, 15.7 m, and 25.0 m). Wave data were also obtained at the array site, and 10 m wind and tidal data were obtained from nearby coastal stations. Intercomparisons of one hour vector average velocities measured with similar instruments deployed near the same depth level indicated sufficient horizontal homogeneity that most differences in the observed current data have been atrributed to real differences in instrument and mooring performance. Detailed discussions of the observed data, instrument and mooring characteristics and performance, and the effect of surface wave and wave-induced mooring motion on different measurement systems are presented.
47\´N,
30\´W during February and March, 1976. A total of 20 current meters were deployed on six moorings set in a roughly linear array parallel to the local coastline and topography. The instruments included the Aanderaa RCM-4, the AMF VACM, the Brookhaven National Laboratory spar buoy system using cylindrical and spherical Marsh-McBirney electromagnetic sensors, the EG&G 850 and CT-3, and the Chesapeake Bay Institute-modified ENDECO 105. Local mean water depth was 27.8 m and current meters were clustered near four depth levels (3.5 m, 7.4 m, 15.7 m, and 25.0 m). Wave data were also obtained at the array site, and 10 m wind and tidal data were obtained from nearby coastal stations. Intercomparisons of one hour vector average velocities measured with similar instruments deployed near the same depth level indicated sufficient horizontal homogeneity that most differences in the observed current data have been atrributed to real differences in instrument and mooring performance. Detailed discussions of the observed data, instrument and mooring characteristics and performance, and the effect of surface wave and wave-induced mooring motion on different measurement systems are presented.Keywords
Current measurement; Instruments; Oceans; Scattering; Sea measurements; Sea surface; Stress; Surface contamination; Surface topography; Surface waves;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Current Measurement, Proceedings of the 1978 IEEE First Working Conference on
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CCM.1978.1158382
Filename
1158382
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