Floating Computers Keep an Eye on the Oceans 86
mightysquirrel81 writes "This fascinating picture story shows the tech behind the global Argo progamme set up to monitor the world's oceans. Using 3,000 floating computers and a network of satellites, researchers measure sea temperature and ocean currents to predict climate change."
Can they *affect* the climate? (Score:1, Interesting)
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No, and it wouldn't have worked on Mars either.
The wind energy is already being conserved and eventually becomes heart.
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Terrarism by the evil eco-terrarists!
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They sure did in the Evan Chan game back in 2001. ;)
(Synopsis: In this online game - an Alternate Reality Game that served as a marketing campaign for the movie A.I. - the scientists of the year 2142 created a network of thermoplankton capable of changing color from black to white, and that could be controlled by a satellite network. Despite the small size, these therm
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Those dispersed devices are called "humans". And those actions are sometimes described as "stop taking planes", "don't buy this SUV", "put a jumper instead of heating your house to summer temperatures during winter", "don't eat too much meat", "move your ass and stop waiting for a technological miracle" or "understand that American/European way of life actually is negotiable".
Anyway, you cannot produce "cool", except if you find a way to release excess heat outside of the atmosphere (e.g.: an open frid
Botnet? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Botnet? (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Botnet? (Score:5, Funny)
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Botnet by land, fish net by sea.
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better idea (Score:1, Interesting)
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Miscalibrated (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Miscalibrated (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Miscalibrated (Score:5, Informative)
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Hey, as long as keep accepting "heating" readings and keep rejecting or massaging "cooling" readings, we can keep up the global warming scam for at least another 5-10 years!
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I really don't know what was going through his mind but I especially like the refrence to how his way is the better way. I mean the comment of Even if it is a scam it is high time that the people of this planet start being better stewards of the ONLY place we have to live. Too bad we have to choke on our o
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Well, I said nothing of the sorts. Maybe you should wake up.
But seeing how you imagined that I did, I will respond to a little of what you said. I encourage you to open your eyes and listen or read what I am going to reply because I don't want you to imagi
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It doesn't keep us from "fixing global warming," but it simply doesn't help. That's the whole point. Kyoto obviously wasn't about the environment. It was about giving the developing countries advantages they wouldn't otherwise have.
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I mean besides making the entire situation look like a redistribution of wealth scam that hasn't decrease Co2 emissions on a global scale yet and won't anytime in the near future, it creates resistance to both the idea of global warming and the purpose solutions based on the fraud value alone. Over half of the countries that signed do not have to lower their emissions. They actually count as a reduction when the UK moves some polluting industries to that third world cou
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Of course, comparing it to the long term dataset in my memory, I now realize that we just had a bit of "Indian Summer" during our normal Autumn, and that Winter is soon to rear it's cold,
If they keep drifting around (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:If they keep drifting around (Score:5, Informative)
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From the article: "Each float weights 25kg and is 2 metres in height (including its aerial) and costs around £15,000 to operate over its lifetime." $30,000 doesn't seem too cheap for something that goes around washing up on the shore.
Re:If they keep drifting around (Score:5, Informative)
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It's not a cheap undertaking, but the data is absolutely invaluable to oceanographers since it's damn near impossible to sample such a huge body using onl
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While in principal, I'd agree that research devices shouldn't pollute, your phrasing is a bit hyperbolic. Do you realize the magnitude [wikipedia.org] of the junk [stormingmedia.us] we toss into ocean? The Argo bots are insignificant. Don't get your knickers all in a twist about litt
A short history of the OSU Buoy Group (Score:5, Interesting)
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Missing The Story.... (Score:2)
But if you get all wrapped up in how 1998ish and "amature" the Web design is, you miss what the actual text says.
For those who are into HARDWARE, it's quite a fascinating tale of the evolution of deep sea moorings from instruments that recorded on photographic film to the high-tech devices we have today.
There are a lot of interesting stories about these things that I've heard from my dad, including how the Russians used to steal them for the technology...
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The Buoy Group operated at Oregon State University for more than 35 years. It was active in the development and use of deep-sea mooring techniques and instruments, particularly current meters and meteorological instruments. The Buoy Group was a major participant in the World Ocean Circulation Experiment (WOCE) and operated the WOCE Current Meter Data Assembly Center.
In the early 1960s the recently formed OSU Department of Oceanography began to make observations off t
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sensors that are unmaintained (Score:3, Interesting)
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Re:sensors that are unmaintained (Score:4, Informative)
First, if another Argo float moves through the same body of water as a previous one, the measurements they make are compared. Each year you get a few hundred matchup like this and that lets you get an indication of the drift.
Second, there are ship measurements that are taken periodically as research vessels cross the ocean. These measurements can be calibrated very exactly, and they sometimes cross float tracks, so you can compare the ship data with occasional float data. They can also send ships out specifically to compare with certain floats, cause the floats transmit their position home every few days.
Third, they've fished some of the floats out of the water and recalibrated them. The ones they've recalibrated this way are used as a sample to calculate drift rates.
Fourth, the reconstructions of ocean state that they do are based on interpolation and long averages, and if the drift is random, the average of a bunch of the floats should be close to reality. If a float is obviously drifting too far from reality (as measured by other floats or the climatology for the area) the data is flagged and removed from the main dataset.
They tried to make the floats accurate to within about
Similar methods are used to calibrate the temperature and oxygen sensors, but you get the idea.
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Still more on prediction, no more on action (Score:1)
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the jury is still out on man made climate change, inspite of what some would force down our throats.
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Donation (Score:1, Funny)
Argo data (Score:1)
http://dapper.pmel.noaa.gov/dchart/ [noaa.gov]
Do we really need this data? (Score:1, Insightful)
So, are they getting from the buoys something more than a known temperature and a constant value?
It seems similar to putting ground vibration sensors to know if a meteorite hit us.
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But you only get a 2D image from satellite. Depth measurements like these give you more of a 3D image.
Like the difference between seeing a sketch of a new building from a single perspective vs an architect's model that you can peer into and around from any angle.
Oblig joke (Score:4, Funny)
Budding Oceanographer? (Score:4, Informative)
Of course, it's all freely available to anyone who might be interested. I only ask that if you make improvements, you share them back so that they can become part of the main distribution.
The Argo dataset is really, really cool and easy to get into! Too bad the resolution is so low and the salinity sensors tend to get fouled over time.
The day after tomorrow: (Score:2, Funny)
T: Remote.
[another buoy seen on the computer screen fails]
S: Make that three.
More garbage at sea :( (Score:2)
So, the boxes die and are these removed from the ocean? Or just left there? But I guess one straw can't break camel's back.
I swear... (Score:1)