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Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

U.S. Extended Continental Shelf Cruise To Map Sections Of The Mariana Trench And The Eastern And Southern Insular Margins Of Guam And The Northern Mariana Islands, Andy Armstrong Dec 2011

U.S. Extended Continental Shelf Cruise To Map Sections Of The Mariana Trench And The Eastern And Southern Insular Margins Of Guam And The Northern Mariana Islands, Andy Armstrong

Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping

U.S. Extended Continental Shelf Cruise to Map Sections of the Mariana Trench and the Eastern and Southern Insular Margins of Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands

CCOM-JHC CRUISE SU10-02

Leg 2: September 24 to October 21, 2010

Apra Harbor, Guam to Apra Harbor, Guam


Do You Believe The Climate Is Changing? Answers From New Survey Research, Lawrence C. Hamilton Dec 2011

Do You Believe The Climate Is Changing? Answers From New Survey Research, Lawrence C. Hamilton

The Carsey School of Public Policy at the Scholars' Repository

This brief explores how political views influence Americans’ understanding and perception of science. The research is based on a national version of the Community and Environment in Rural America survey called NCERA, and on New Hampshire’s statewide Granite State Poll. Author Lawrence Hamilton reports that most people on both surveys feel that they understand either a great deal or a moderate amount about global warming or climate change. However, deep partisan divisions affect both personal beliefs about climate change and perceptions of agreement among scientists. Democrats are much more likely to state they believe that climate change is happening, caused …


Estimating Oil Concentration And Flow Rate With Calibrated Vessel-Mounted Acoustic Echo Sounders, Thomas C. Weber, Alex De Robertis, Shep Smith, Samuel F. Greenaway, Larry A. Mayer, Glen Rice Dec 2011

Estimating Oil Concentration And Flow Rate With Calibrated Vessel-Mounted Acoustic Echo Sounders, Thomas C. Weber, Alex De Robertis, Shep Smith, Samuel F. Greenaway, Larry A. Mayer, Glen Rice

Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping

As part of a larger program aimed at evaluating acoustic techniques for mapping the distribution of subsurface oil and gas associated with the Deepwater Horizon-Macondo oil spill, observations were made on June 24 and 25, 2010 using vessel-mounted calibrated single-beam echo sounders on the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration ship Thomas Jefferson. Coincident with visual observations of oil at the sea surface, the 200-kHz echo sounder showed anomalously high-volume scattering strength in the upper 200 m on the western side of the wellhead, more than 100 times higher than the surrounding waters at 1,800-m distance from the wellhead, …


Consistency In Statistical Moments As A Test For Bubble Cloud Clustering, Thomas C. Weber, Anthony P. Lyons, David L. Bradley Nov 2011

Consistency In Statistical Moments As A Test For Bubble Cloud Clustering, Thomas C. Weber, Anthony P. Lyons, David L. Bradley

Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping

Frequency dependent measurements of attenuation and/or sound speed through clouds of gas bubbles in liquids are often inverted to find the bubble size distribution and the void fraction of gas. The inversions are often done using an effective medium theory as a forward model under the assumption that the bubble positions are Poisson distributed (i.e., statistically independent). Under circumstances in which single scattering does not adequately describe the pressure field, the assumption of independence in position can yield large errors when clustering is present, leading to errors in the inverted bubble size distribution. It is difficult, however, to determine the …


Climate Change In The Piscataqua/Great Bay Region: Past, Present, And Future, Cameron P. Wake, Elizabeth Burakowski, Eric Kelsey, Katharine Hayhoe, Anne Stoner, Chris Watson, Ellen Douglas Nov 2011

Climate Change In The Piscataqua/Great Bay Region: Past, Present, And Future, Cameron P. Wake, Elizabeth Burakowski, Eric Kelsey, Katharine Hayhoe, Anne Stoner, Chris Watson, Ellen Douglas

The Sustainability Institute Publications

Earth ’s climate changes. It always has and always will. However, an extensive body of scientific evidence indicates that human activities are now a significant force driving change in the Earth’s climate system. This report describes how the climate of the Piscataqua/Great Bay region of coastal New Hampshire in the United States has changed over the past century and how the future climate of the region will be affected by human activities that are warming the planet.

Overall, the region has been getting warmer and wetter over the last century, and the rate of change has increased over the last …


Another Dimension From Lidar – Obtaining Foliage Density From Full Waveform Data, Thomas Adams, Peter Beets, Christopher Parrish Oct 2011

Another Dimension From Lidar – Obtaining Foliage Density From Full Waveform Data, Thomas Adams, Peter Beets, Christopher Parrish

Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping

LiDAR tells the user where surfaces are, not what they are. In this study we investigate the potential for waveform LiDAR to provide more information on the nature of the returns over forestry. Waveform LiDAR was acquired for ten Pinus radiata plots in a New Zealand plantation, along with comprehensive leaf area sampling in 2m vertical bands. The decay rate of each waveform peak was shown to be a useful tool for estimating foliage density, and has potential for identifying regions containing ground and understorey. Leaf Area Density (LAD) is an expression of foliage density per unit height, and a …


U.S. Law Of The Sea Cruise To Map The Foot Of The Slope And 2500-M Isobath Of The U.S. Arctic Ocean Margin, Larry A. Mayer, Andy Armstrong Sep 2011

U.S. Law Of The Sea Cruise To Map The Foot Of The Slope And 2500-M Isobath Of The U.S. Arctic Ocean Margin, Larry A. Mayer, Andy Armstrong

Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping

U.S. Law of the Sea cruise to map the foot of the slope and 2500-m isobath of the US Arctic Ocean margin

CRUISE HEALY 1102

August 15 to September 28, 2011

Barrow, AK to Dutch Harbor, AK


Longpath Doas Observations Of Surface Bro At Summit, Greenland, J Stutz, J L. Thomas, S C. Hurlock, M Schneider, R Von Glasow, M Piot, K Gorham, John F. Burkhart, Luke D. Ziemba, Jack E. Dibb, Barry Lefer Sep 2011

Longpath Doas Observations Of Surface Bro At Summit, Greenland, J Stutz, J L. Thomas, S C. Hurlock, M Schneider, R Von Glasow, M Piot, K Gorham, John F. Burkhart, Luke D. Ziemba, Jack E. Dibb, Barry Lefer

Earth Sciences

Reactive halogens, and in particular bromine oxide (BrO), have frequently been observed in regions with large halide reservoirs, for example during bromine catalyzed coastal polar ozone depletion events. Much less is known about the presence and impact of reactive halogens in areas without obvious halide reservoirs, such as the polar ice sheets or continental snow.

We report the first LP-DOAS measurements of BrO at Summit research station in the center of the Greenland ice sheet at an altitude of 3200 m. BrO mixing ratios in May 2007 and June 2008 were typically between 1–3 pmol mol−1, with maxima …


Multi-Touch 3d Exploratory Analysis Of Ocean Flow Models, Thomas J. Butkiewicz, Colin Ware Sep 2011

Multi-Touch 3d Exploratory Analysis Of Ocean Flow Models, Thomas J. Butkiewicz, Colin Ware

Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping

Modern ocean flow simulations are generating increasingly complex, multi-layer 3D ocean flow models. However, most researchers are still using traditional 2D visualizations to visualize these models one slice at a time. Properly designed 3D visualization tools can be highly effective for revealing the complex, dynamic flow patterns and structures present in these models. However, the transition from visualizing ocean flow patterns in 2D to 3D presents many challenges, including occlusion and depth ambiguity. Further complications arise from the interaction methods required to navigate, explore, and interact with these 3D datasets. We present a system that employs a combination of stereoscopic …


A Method For Field Calibration Of A Multibeam Echo Sounder, Carlo Lanzoni, Thomas C. Weber Sep 2011

A Method For Field Calibration Of A Multibeam Echo Sounder, Carlo Lanzoni, Thomas C. Weber

Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping

The use of multibeam echo sounders (MBES) has grown more frequent in applications like seafloor imaging, fisheries, and habitat mapping. Calibration of these instruments is important for understanding and validating the performance of MBES. For echo sounders in general, different calibration methodologies have been developed in controlled environments such as a fresh water tank and in the actual field of operation. While calibration in an indoor tank facility can bring excellent results in terms of accuracy, the amount of time required for a complete calibration can become prohibitively large. A field calibration can reveal the actual radiation beam pattern for …


Observations Of Hydroxyl And Peroxy Radicals And The Impact Of Bro At Summit, Greenland In 2007 And 2008, J Liao, L Gregory Huey, D Tanner, N Brough, Steve Brooks, Jack E. Dibb, J Stutz, J L. Thomas, Barry Lefer, C Haman, K Gorham Aug 2011

Observations Of Hydroxyl And Peroxy Radicals And The Impact Of Bro At Summit, Greenland In 2007 And 2008, J Liao, L Gregory Huey, D Tanner, N Brough, Steve Brooks, Jack E. Dibb, J Stutz, J L. Thomas, Barry Lefer, C Haman, K Gorham

Earth Sciences

The Greenland Summit Halogen-HOx (GSHOX) Campaign was performed in spring 2007 and summer 2008 to investigate the impact of halogens on HOx (= OH + HO2) cycling above the Greenland Ice Sheet. Chemical species including hydroxyl and peroxy radicals (OH and HO2+ RO2), ozone (O3), nitrogen oxide (NO), nitric acid (HNO3), nitrous acid (HONO), reactive gaseous mercury (RGM), and bromine oxide (BrO) were measured during the campaign. The median midday values of HO2 + RO2 and OH concentrations observed by chemical ionization mass spectrometry (CIMS) were …


Remote Characterization Of Seafloor Adjacent To Shipwrecks Using Mosaicking And Analysis Of Backscatter Response, Giuseppe Masetti, Roberto Sacile, Andrea Trucco Jun 2011

Remote Characterization Of Seafloor Adjacent To Shipwrecks Using Mosaicking And Analysis Of Backscatter Response, Giuseppe Masetti, Roberto Sacile, Andrea Trucco

Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping

The paper’s aim is to evaluate mosaicking and analysis of backscatter angular responses as adequate techniques to quickly characterize the seafloor adjacent to shipwrecks, extending the results of a limited number of grabs. Both techniques have been applied to the casestudy of the VLCC Haven shipwreck site, applying the approach known as Geocoder among the available methods. From these results, the development of the research activities will attempt to improve techniques and to generalize a methodological approach for the analysis of backscatter coming from an area of seafloor with the presence of one or more anthropic objects.


In Situ Measurements Of Tropospheric Volcanic Plumes In Ecuador And Colombia During Tc, S A. Carn, K D. Froyd, B E. Anderson, Paul Wennberg, John D. Crounse, K Spencer, Jack E. Dibb, N A. Krotkov, E V. Browell, Jonathan Hair, Glenn S. Diskin, G W. Sachse May 2011

In Situ Measurements Of Tropospheric Volcanic Plumes In Ecuador And Colombia During Tc, S A. Carn, K D. Froyd, B E. Anderson, Paul Wennberg, John D. Crounse, K Spencer, Jack E. Dibb, N A. Krotkov, E V. Browell, Jonathan Hair, Glenn S. Diskin, G W. Sachse

Earth Sciences

A NASA DC‐8 research aircraft penetrated tropospheric gas and aerosol plumes sourced from active volcanoes in Ecuador and Colombia during the Tropical Composition, Cloud and Climate Coupling (TC4 ) mission in July–August 2007. The likely source volcanoes were Tungurahua (Ecuador) and Nevado del Huila (Colombia). The TC4 data provide rare insight into the chemistry of volcanic plumes in the tropical troposphere and permit a comparison of SO2 column amounts measured by the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) on the Aura satellite with in situ SO2 measurements. Elevated concentrations of SO2, sulfate aerosol, and particles were measured by DC‐8 instrumentation in volcanic …


Modeling Chemistry In And Above Snow At Summit, Greenland – Part 1: Model Description And Results, J L. Thomas, J Stutz, Barry Lefer, L Gregory Huey, K Toyota, Jack E. Dibb, R Von Glasow May 2011

Modeling Chemistry In And Above Snow At Summit, Greenland – Part 1: Model Description And Results, J L. Thomas, J Stutz, Barry Lefer, L Gregory Huey, K Toyota, Jack E. Dibb, R Von Glasow

Earth Sciences

Sun-lit snow is increasingly recognized as a chemical reactor that plays an active role in uptake, transformation, and release of atmospheric trace gases. Snow is known to influence boundary layer air on a local scale, and given the large global surface coverage of snow may also be significant on regional and global scales. We present a new detailed one-dimensional snow chemistry module that has been coupled to the 1-D atmospheric boundary layer model MISTRA. The new 1-D snow module, which is dynamically coupled to the overlaying atmospheric model, includes heat transport in the snowpack, molecular diffusion, and wind pumping of …


Climate Change: Partisanship, Understanding, And Public Opinion, Lawrence C. Hamilton Apr 2011

Climate Change: Partisanship, Understanding, And Public Opinion, Lawrence C. Hamilton

The Carsey School of Public Policy at the Scholars' Repository

In 2010, Carsey Institute researchers began including three new questions about climate change on a series of regional surveys. They asked how much people understand about the issue of global warming or climate change; whether they think that most scientists agree that climate change is happening now as a result of human activities; and what they believe personally about the topic. Survey results show that while large majorities agree that climate change is happening now, they split on whether this is attributed mainly to human or natural causes. Brief author Lawrence Hamilton concludes that most people gather information about climate …


Multi-Scale Modeling Study Of The Source Contributions To Near-Surface Ozone And Sulfur Oxides Levels Over California During The Arctas-Carb Period, M. Huang, Gregory R. Carmichael, S N. Spak, B Adhikary, S Kulkarni, Y Cheng, C Wei, Y Tang, A D'Allura, Paul Wennberg, L Gregory Huey, Jack E. Dibb, Jose L. Jimenez, Michael J. Cubison, Andrew Weinheimer, Ajith P. Kaduwela, Chenxia Cai, M Wong, R Bradley Pierce, J Al-Saadi, David G. Streets, Q Zhang Apr 2011

Multi-Scale Modeling Study Of The Source Contributions To Near-Surface Ozone And Sulfur Oxides Levels Over California During The Arctas-Carb Period, M. Huang, Gregory R. Carmichael, S N. Spak, B Adhikary, S Kulkarni, Y Cheng, C Wei, Y Tang, A D'Allura, Paul Wennberg, L Gregory Huey, Jack E. Dibb, Jose L. Jimenez, Michael J. Cubison, Andrew Weinheimer, Ajith P. Kaduwela, Chenxia Cai, M Wong, R Bradley Pierce, J Al-Saadi, David G. Streets, Q Zhang

Earth Sciences

Chronic high surface ozone (O3) levels and the increasing sulfur oxides (SOx = SO2+SO4) ambient concentrations over South Coast (SC) and other areas of California (CA) are affected by both local emissions and long-range transport. In this paper, multi-scale tracer, full-chemistry and adjoint simulations using the STEM atmospheric chemistry model are conducted to assess the contribution of local emission sourcesto SC O3 and to evaluate the impacts of transported sulfur and local emissions on the SC sulfur budgetduring the ARCTAS-CARB experiment period in 2008. Sensitivity simulations quantify contributions of biogenic and fire …


On The Horizon: Better Bottom Detection For Areas Of Sub-Aquatic Vegetation, Tami Beduhn, Semme J. Dijkstra Apr 2011

On The Horizon: Better Bottom Detection For Areas Of Sub-Aquatic Vegetation, Tami Beduhn, Semme J. Dijkstra

Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping

Bottom detection methods in single beam echo sounding (SBES) are often less robust in areas with subaquatic vegetation. Due to current mapping efforts emphasizing near shore coverage for safety of navigation and the mission for alternative uses of hydrographic quality data with the Integrated Ocean and Coastal Mapping (IOCM) Center, there is a requirement for both robust bottom detection in areas with complex vegetation and delineation of the vegetated areas themselves. Vegetation can often be found growing in close proximity to rocks and other features of navigational significance and would provide valuable information to fisheries if prime fish habitats like …


Streamlining Sound Speed Profile Pre-Processing: Case Studies And Field Trials, Jonathan Beaudoin, A. Furlong, Steve Smyth, Henri Floc'h, Xavier Lurton Apr 2011

Streamlining Sound Speed Profile Pre-Processing: Case Studies And Field Trials, Jonathan Beaudoin, A. Furlong, Steve Smyth, Henri Floc'h, Xavier Lurton

Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping

High rate sound speed profiling systems have the potential to maximize the efficiency of multibeam echosounder systems (MBES) by increasing the accuracy at the outer edges of the swath where refraction effects are at their worst. In some cases, high rate sampling on the order of tens of casts per hour is required to capture the spatio-temporal oceanographic variability and this increased sampling rate can challenge the data acquisition workflow if refraction corrections are to be applied in real-time. Common bottlenecks result from sound speed profile (SSP) preprocessing requirements, e.g. file format conversion, cast extension, reduction of the number of …


2010 Western Pacific Bathymetry Mapping For U.S. Law Of The Sea, James V. Gardner, Andy Armstrong Apr 2011

2010 Western Pacific Bathymetry Mapping For U.S. Law Of The Sea, James V. Gardner, Andy Armstrong

Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping

No abstract provided.


The Port Norfolk Project: Improved Raster Navigation Products From High Resolution Source Data, Matt Wilson, James J. Miller, Vanessa Self Miller, Kolleen Mortimer, Katrina Wyllie Apr 2011

The Port Norfolk Project: Improved Raster Navigation Products From High Resolution Source Data, Matt Wilson, James J. Miller, Vanessa Self Miller, Kolleen Mortimer, Katrina Wyllie

Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping

With increasing capabilities in technology, modern hydrographic surveys are comprised of similarly increasing amounts of data, only a minute fraction of which is currently available in the nautical charts produced by the NOAA Office of Coast Survey (OCS). Simultaneously, a tremendous amount of effort goes into the generalization and optimal cartographic representation of the hydrographic data onto raster products, from which the vector products are digitized. Preserving and maintaining a single database of high-resolution vector source data will retain— and make accessible—much more of the hydrographic data collected, alleviate the burden of generalization, and would allow for delivery of high-resolution …


Providing Meteorological And Hydrographic Information Via Ais Application-Specific Messages: Challenges And Opportunities, Lee Alexander Apr 2011

Providing Meteorological And Hydrographic Information Via Ais Application-Specific Messages: Challenges And Opportunities, Lee Alexander

Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping

AIS Application-Specific Messages (ASMs) transmitted in binary format will be increasingly used to digitally communicate maritime safety/security information between participating vessels and shore stations. This includes time-sensitive metrological and hydrographic (met/hydro) information that is critical for safe vessel transits and efficient ports/waterways management. IMO recently published a new Safety-of-Navigation Circular (SN.1./Circ.289) that includes a number of meteorological and hydrographic message applications and data parameters. While there are no specific display standards for AIS ASMs on shipborne or shore-based systems, IMO Has also issued general guidance for the presentation/display of ASMs (SN.1/Circ.290). It includes specific mention of conforming to the e-Navigation …


Rethinking The Patch Test For Phase Measuring Bathymetric Sonars, Janice Eisenberg, Michael Davidson, Jonathan Beaudoin, Steve Brodet Apr 2011

Rethinking The Patch Test For Phase Measuring Bathymetric Sonars, Janice Eisenberg, Michael Davidson, Jonathan Beaudoin, Steve Brodet

Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping

While conducting hydrographic survey operations in the Florida Keys, NOAA Ship Thomas Jefferson served as a test platform for the initial operational implementation of an L-3 Klein HydroChart 5000 Swath Bathymetry Sonar System1 , a hull-mounted phase measuring bathymetric sonar (PMBS). During the project it became apparent that the traditional patch test typically utilized for multibeam echosounder (MBES) systems was poorly suited to the HydroChart – and perhaps other PMBS systems as well. These systems have several inherent characteristics that make it difficult to isolate and subsequently solve for biases under the traditional patch test paradigm: presence of a nadir …


Measuring The Water Level Datum Relative To The Ellipsoid During Hydrographic Survey, Glen Rice, Jack Riley Apr 2011

Measuring The Water Level Datum Relative To The Ellipsoid During Hydrographic Survey, Glen Rice, Jack Riley

Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping

Hydrographic surveys are referenced vertically to a local water level “chart” datum. Conducting a survey relative to the ellipsoid dictates a datum transformation take place before the survey is used for current navigational products. Models that combine estimates for the tide, sea surface topography, the geoid, and the ellipsoid are often used to transform an ellipsoid referenced survey to a local water level datum. Regions covered by these vertical datum transformation models are limited and so would appear to constrain the areas where ellipsoid referenced surveys can be conducted. Because areas not covered by a vertical datum transformation model still …


Design And Implementation Of An Extensible Variable Resolution Bathymetric Estimator, Brian R. Calder, Glen Rice Apr 2011

Design And Implementation Of An Extensible Variable Resolution Bathymetric Estimator, Brian R. Calder, Glen Rice

Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping

For grid-based bathymetric estimation techniques, determining the right resolution at which to work is essential. Appropriate grid resolution can be related, roughly, to data density and thence to sonar characteristics, survey methodology, and depth. It is therefore variable in almost all survey scenarios, and methods of addressing this problem can have enormous impact on the correctness and efficiency of computational schemes of this kind. This paper describes the design and implementation of a bathymetric depth estimation algorithm that attempts to address this problem by combining the computational efficiency of locally regular grids with piecewise-variable estimation resolution to provide a single …


Seafloor Characterization Using Airborne Hyperspectral Co-Registration Procedures Independent From Attitude And Positioning Sensors, Yuri Rzhanov, Shachak Pe'eri, James V. Gardner, James Guilford Mar 2011

Seafloor Characterization Using Airborne Hyperspectral Co-Registration Procedures Independent From Attitude And Positioning Sensors, Yuri Rzhanov, Shachak Pe'eri, James V. Gardner, James Guilford

Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping

The advance of remote-sensing technology and data-storage capabilities has progressed in the last decade to commercial multi-sensor data collection. There is a constant need to characterize, quantify and monitor the coastal areas for habitat research and coastal management. In this paper, we present work on seafloor characterization that uses hyperspectral imagery (HSI). The HSI data allows the operator to extend seafloor characterization from multibeam backscatter towards land and thus creates a seamless ocean-to-land characterization of the littoral zone.


Essential Fish Habitat Project Status Report, Jodi L. Pirtle, Christopher D. Wilson, Chris Rooper, Thomas C. Weber Jan 2011

Essential Fish Habitat Project Status Report, Jodi L. Pirtle, Christopher D. Wilson, Chris Rooper, Thomas C. Weber

Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping

: Groundfish that associate with rugged seafloor types are difficult to assess with bottom-trawl sampling gear. Simrad ME70 multibeam echosounder (MBES) data and video imagery were collected to characterize trawlable and untrawlable areas, and to ultimately improve efforts to determine habitat-specific groundfish biomass. The data were collected during two acoustic-trawl surveys of the Gulf of Alaska (GOA) during 2011 and 2012 by NOAA Alaska Fisheries Science Center (AFSC) researchers. MBES data were collected continuously along the trackline, which included parallel transects (1-20 nmi spacing) and fine-scale survey locations in 2011. Video data were collected at camera stations using a drop …


U.S. Law Of The Sea Cruise To Complete The Mapping Of Necker Ridge, Central Pacific Ocean, James V. Gardner, Brian R. Calder Jan 2011

U.S. Law Of The Sea Cruise To Complete The Mapping Of Necker Ridge, Central Pacific Ocean, James V. Gardner, Brian R. Calder

Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping

U.S. Law of the Sea Cruise to Complete the Mapping of Necker Ridge, Central Pacific Ocean

CRUISE KM1121

July 31, to August 10, 2011

Honolulu, HI to Honolulu, HI