| September
12, 2005
Ocean Instrument Program Led By
Scripps Set To Achieve World Coverage
Scientists in Global Drifter Program deploy ceremonial
1,250th buoy
By Mario Aguilera
An ambitious
idea spawned more than 20 years ago to develop a new way to
watch the world change has come to fruition.
The Global Drifter
Program (GDP), largely led by Scripps Institution of Oceanography
at the University of California, San Diego, and Scripps Distinguished
Professor Peter Niiler, will meet its lofty goal of blanketing
the globe on Sept. 18 when the program’s 1,250th instrument
is dropped in the ocean off Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
GDP
buoys, also called drifters, are designed to travel the oceans
taking measurements of sea surface temperatures, ocean currents,
air pressure and other parameters. By linking and disseminating
the information relayed from each of these instruments in a
global network, scientists and others have been able to produce
new details about the world’s ocean processes, key information
for weather and climate forecasting and important calibrations
of satellite readings.
“When the GDP
drifter data is combined with satellite measurements we can
now obtain a complete, accurate map of the sea surface temperature
of the world twice per week,” said Niiler, a scientist
in the Physical Oceanography Research Division at Scripps. “These
‘weather maps’ of the ocean surface will tell us
how Earth is warming up and where it is warming more than in
other places. These combined data also give us an accurate picture
of the changing currents and patterns of ocean circulation.”
The GDP is a component
of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s
(NOAA) Global Ocean Observing System and Global Climate Observing
System.
According to Niiler,
more than 250 research papers have been published with new findings
derived through GDP circulation measurements. Many more have
used its sea temperature measurements. Topics have ranged from
El Niños and La Niñas to global climate change.
Niiler believes the
impact of GDP information will continue to grow because of the
distinct characteristics displayed in current systems off coasts
around the world. Analyzing the strongest north-south current
system in the world, the Agulhas Current off the eastern coast
of South Africa, tells a much different story than studying
the California Current, the north-south circulation of the north
Pacific Ocean that travels just off California’s waters.
“The GDP observations
are of great interest to people all over the world,” said
Niiler. “If you want to know what’s happening in
your backyard, or you want to know what’s happening on
a global basis, these data will assist you.”
When Niiler called
a meeting of scientists in Boulder, Colo., in 1982, surface
temperature readings and circulation patterns were a mystery
in large regions of the world, especially in the Southern Ocean.
“A large part
of the world simply could not be sampled,” said Niiler,
“because most of the world’s ships don’t go
there. We needed a new way.”
Niiler and his colleagues
resolved that such gaps could only be filled with a completely
new system of observing the entire Earth’s oceans. They
also decided that this mission could only be accomplished with
the development of new ocean instruments.
With long-term support
from Scripps, Niiler and his colleagues began to work with engineers
in designing and developing low-cost, rugged drifters that measure
currents with high accuracy and relay their sensor information
through existing satellite communications systems. Scripps and
Niiler eventually led the design, manufacture, deployment and
research analysis of the program. Yet Scripps scientists could
not do it all alone, Niiler stresses, and national and international
partners played a significant role
in the program’s development through organizations that
include NOAA’s Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological
Laboratory, various meteorological groups, oceanographers from
20 countries and nearly all United States government research
funding agencies. In the future, NOAA will provide about 80
percent of the drifters to maintain the array.
Although the GDP has
met its goal of populating the global ocean with 1,250 drifters,
the array of instruments has become so valuable to science and
other applications that the network will continue to grow. Challenges
associated with drifter deployments in areas rarely visited
by ships will be addressed by increasing future deployments
by air. Drifters are now deployed by the United States Air Force’s
“Hurricane Hunter Squadron” in front of hurricanes
to obtain data on hurricane strength and size.
New ways of using the
drifters as platforms for environmental sensors also are being
explored, including measurements for rain, biochemical concentrations
and surface conductivity.
Media Contacts: Mario Aguilera or Cindy Clark
(858) 534-3624
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