Title :
A Low-Cost, Expendable Helicopter-Deployed Buoy for Ocean Surface Meteorological Measurements
Author_Institution :
The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab., Laurel, Maryland, USA
fDate :
Sept. 28 1987-Oct. 1 1987
Abstract :
A low-cost, expendable, helicopter-deployed, wave- riding buoy has been developed to measure meteorological properties at sea. The buoy weighs 8.2 kg and is 1.3 m long and 8.9 cm in diameter in its stored configuration. After deployment, the buoy extends a 2.5-m sensor mast above the water and an 3.8-m ballasted keel below the water. Buoyancy is provided by an inflated air bladder. An airsonde electronics package that measures relative humidity, barometric pressure, and air temperature transmits the data via a UHF transmitter to a receiver on a helicopter. The received data are displayed and recorded in the helicopter. The buoy is simple to construct, uses off-the-shelf hardware, and requires very few, easily machined components.
Keywords :
Aluminum; Assembly; Electronic ballasts; Helicopters; Instruments; Meteorology; Ocean temperature; Sea measurements; Temperature measurement; Testing;
Conference_Titel :
OCEANS '87
Conference_Location :
Halifax, NS, Canada
DOI :
10.1109/OCEANS.1987.1160861