High sampling rate thermistor string observations at the slope of Great Meteor Seamount

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Abstract

A high sampling rate (1 Hz) thermistor string has been built to accommodate the scientific need to accurately monitor high-frequency and vigorous internal wave and overturning processes in the ocean. The thermistors and their custom designed electronics can register temperature at an estimated precision of about 0.001-C with a response time faster than 0.25 s down to depths of 6000m. With a quick in situ calibration using SBE 911 CTD an absolute accuracy of 0.005°C is obtained. The present string holds 128 sensors at 0.5m intervals, which are all read-out within 0.5 s. When sampling at 1 Hz, the batteries and the memory capacity of the recorder allow for deployments of up to 2 weeks. In this paper, the instrument is described in some detail. Its performance is illustrated with examples from the first moored observations, which show Kelvin-Helmholtz overturning and very high-frequency (Doppler-shifted) internal waves besides occasionally large turbulent bores moving up the sloping side of Great Meteor Seamount, Canary Basin, North-Atlantic Ocean. © 2005 Author(s).

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Van Haren, H., Groenewegen, R., Laan, M., & Koster, B. (2005). High sampling rate thermistor string observations at the slope of Great Meteor Seamount. Ocean Science, 1(1), 17–28. https://doi.org/10.5194/os-1-17-2005

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