1 / 22

JCOMM Data Buoy Cooperation Panel October 16, 2006 National Data Buoy Center 2006 Review:

JCOMM Data Buoy Cooperation Panel October 16, 2006 National Data Buoy Center 2006 Review: A Year of Growth Paul F. Moersdorf, PhD, Director. National Data Buoy Center.

colin
Download Presentation

JCOMM Data Buoy Cooperation Panel October 16, 2006 National Data Buoy Center 2006 Review:

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. JCOMM Data Buoy Cooperation Panel October 16, 2006 National Data Buoy Center 2006 Review: A Year of Growth Paul F. Moersdorf, PhD, Director

  2. National Data Buoy Center Objective: Build and sustain a global observing system and ensure consistently high quality data responsive to the long-term climate and maritime service requirements. Part 1 of brief Part 2 of brief

  3. Part 1:NOOSS NDBC Ocean Observing System of Systems

  4. Observing Growth at NDBC • NOAA’s major national and international contributions are through its coastal marine and global climate observation initiatives. • NDBC has collected meteorological data in U.S. coastal waters for over 30 years. • NDBC now has a global responsibility that includes: • Tropical Atmosphere Ocean (TAO) array • Pilot Research Array in the Tropical Atlantic • Tsunami detection network • Hurricane buoy network

  5. IOOS Required Parameters* Lower Ocean Ocean Atmosphere Surface Sub-surface Temperature Temperature Temperature Pressure Salinity Salinity Wind Currents Currents Precipitation Wave Height / Period Dissolved Oxygen Humidity Wave Direction Carbon Dioxide Radiation Sea Height/ LevelChlorophyll Fluxes Fluxes Nutrients Visibility Radiation Radiation “Air quality” Ocean color Marine monitoring Sea Ice Bathymetry Toxins / pollutants Toxins / pollutants Acoustic Signals * GREEN parameters can be operationally observed by NDBC.

  6. Wind speed / direction Air temp / humidity / pressure Tracking / communications Navigational beacon Solar panels Magnetometer, compass, computer, batteries, position tracking Wave height, period, direction* Ocean temperature Surface currents Surface salinity Current profiler Mooring Bottom tsunami pressure sensors* Air Water * Not on all buoys

  7. Observing System Platforms C-MAN station DART II 6-meter NOMAD TAO 3-meter discus C-MAN station

  8. Coastal Weather Buoys 92 06-062 (May 2006)

  9. Tropical Atmosphere Ocean 55 06-062 (May 2006)

  10. Deep-ocean Assessment and Reporting of Tsunamis 19 06-007 Group 7A (Aug 2006)

  11. DART (planned) 19 Stations Presently Established 9 Stations to be Established Locations Determined Stations to be Established Locations Conceptual 11 06-007 Group 7A (Aug 2006)

  12. Hurricane Supplemental Buoy 15 06-062 (May 2006)

  13. Coastal Automated Stations 56 06-062 (May 2006)

  14. Part 2:IOOS DAC Integrated Ocean Observing System Data Assembly Center

  15. Data Assembly Center Activities • Occupy a leadership role in developing and setting IOOS standards and protocols through workshops, meetings, etc. • Obtain marine weather and ocean observations from NDBC and other NOAA platforms, regional observing systems, universities and commercial sites. • Ensure the consistent, high quality of these observations in a timeframe consistent with needs of forecasters, mariners, modelers, and archive centers. • Disseminate the data to diverse user communities via multiple U.S. IOOS recommended transmission paths.

  16. PARTNERS 271 06-062 (May 2006)

  17. NDBC IOOS DAC Partners* Present data providers and station numbers: National Water Level Observation Network – 138 stations Scripps Institute of Oceanography – 26 Coastal Ocean Monitoring and Prediction System – 17 Gulf of Maine Ocean Observing System – 10 Long Island Sound Ferry – 10 Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory – 8 Chesapeake Bay Observing System – 7 Carolina Coastal Ocean Observation and Prediction System – 6 LSU Wave-Current Surge Information System for Coastal Louisiana – 5 Texas Automated Buoy System – 5 Weather Forecast Office Green Bay – 4 * Not including oil and gas industry ocean current data sites.

  18. NDBC IOOS DAC Partners(continued) Present data providers and station numbers: University of Connecticut – MYSOUND – 4 stations Texas Coastal Ocean Observation Network – 4 Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium – 4 Stevens Institute of Technology – 4 Skidaway Institute of Oceanography – 3 Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute – 3 (includes CIMT) Coastal Ocean Research and Monitoring Program – 3 Dauphin Island Sea Lab – 3 Shell Oil – 3 CORIE – 2 Center for Integrated Marine Technology – 1 North Carolina Coastal Ocean Observing System – 1 University of Southern Mississippi – 1 Forest Oil – 1 SF Beams – 1

  19. Joint Project with Oil & Gas Industry New Orleans North Central Gulf of Mexico Real-time ocean current data is transmitted from each of the ~50 platforms to NDBC for standard QA/QC processing and distribution.

  20. NDBC IOOS Data Assembly Center Katrina O & G TAO

  21. Closing Thoughts • This is a good time to be in Ocean Observing! • Long term success depends on technology: • Low / No cost maintenance; smaller, power efficient, economical (but still accurate) sensors; • survivable platforms.

  22. Thank You photo courtesy of MeteoFrance

More Related