• DocumentCode
    705645
  • Title

    Ancestry of ADCPs

  • Author

    Spain, Peter

  • Author_Institution
    Teledyne RD Instrum., Poway, CA, USA
  • fYear
    2015
  • fDate
    2-6 March 2015
  • Firstpage
    1
  • Lastpage
    3
  • Abstract
    Fifty years ago, an incredibly creative period of work by William S. Richardson ushered in the modern era of ocean instrumentation for measuring currents. Although an ADCP uses sonar-based technology, quite different from Richardson´s devices, the functional capabilities of an ADCP can be traced to his pioneering work. ADCPs measure time series of vertical profiles of water currents. This approach merged two instrumentation streams -- current metering and vertical profiling-- both of which were founded in Richardson´s work. In this paper, we review connecting threads from ADCPs to Richardson´s pioneering inventions. For the most part, time variability of currents has been studied by using self-recording current meters deployed on a mooring line for an extended period. Typically their data sets described the history of concurrent motions at a few depths. Conversely, the vertical structure of currents has been studied by using free-falling velocity profilers that provided, for a time limited by cruise duration, well resolved snapshots of ocean currents throughout the water column yet separated by hours. While at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Bill Richardson developed a self-recording current meter and methods for deploying several of them on a deep-sea mooring line. Later, at the University of Miami, he developed a free-falling device -- dropsonde -- for measuring water volume transport. Though distinct developments, both were motivated by the same goal: measuring the Gulf Stream.
  • Keywords
    ocean waves; oceanographic equipment; oceanographic techniques; ADCP functional capabilities; Bill Richardson; Richardson devices; Richardson pioneering inventions; University of Miami; Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution; current vertical structure; deep-sea mooring line; dropsonde; free-falling device; ocean current snapshots; ocean instrumentation; self-recording current meter; self-recording current meters; sonar-based technology; water current vertical profiles; water volume transport; Current measurement; Oceans; Probes; Sea measurements; Time measurement; Velocity measurement;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Current, Waves and Turbulence Measurement (CWTM), 2015 IEEE/OES Eleventh
  • Conference_Location
    St. Petersburg, FL
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4799-8418-3
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/CWTM.2015.7098114
  • Filename
    7098114