Temporal Sampling Requirements for Surface Drifting Buoys in the Tropical Pacific

  • Hansen D
  • Herman A
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Abstract

Abstract Drifting buoy data from the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean are used to evaluate the degradation of sea surface temperature and current information incurred by reducing the number of transmissions from drifting buoys using the ARGOS system for position finding. Buoy locations are interpolated at uniform time intervals using an optimum interpolation method known as Kriging, which provides also an estimate of the rms position error. It is found that the published standard for surface current measurement for the TOGA Program (5 cm s−1) can be met with transmissions on one day of three in the Southern Hemisphere. Due to stronger mesoscale variability in the Northern Hemisphere the standard would be jeopardized by reducing transmissions even to one day of two. The standard for observation of sea surface temperature (0.1°C) can be met in either hemisphere with transmissions on one day of four. The Lagrangian decorrelation times for the Northern Hemisphere region of the eastern tropical Pacific are estim...

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Hansen, D. V., & Herman, A. (1989). Temporal Sampling Requirements for Surface Drifting Buoys in the Tropical Pacific. Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology, 6(4), 599–607. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0426(1989)006<0599:tsrfsd>2.0.co;2

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