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Successful deployment of the 16th Stratus surface buoy off Northern Chile.

Successful deployment of the 16th Stratus surface buoy off Northern Chile.
Successful deployment of the 16th Stratus surface buoy off Northern Chile.
Successful deployment of the 16th Stratus surface buoy off Northern Chile.
Successful deployment of the 16th Stratus surface buoy off Northern Chile.
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295593
Graham, Raymond
Successful deployment of the 16th Stratus surface buoy off Northern Chile.
Still Image
05/13/2017
G0047158.JPG
Image Of the Day caption:
Members of the WHOI Upper Oceans Processes Group aboard the NOAA ship Ronald H. Brown drop the anchor to deploy a surface buoy in a long-term study on air-sea interactions in the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean. The Stratus project began in 2000 to better understand the role of persistent stratus clouds west of Peru and Chile and to investigate why climate models show errors in sea surface temperature in this region. The buoy is equipped with instruments that measure air temperature, humidity, wind speeds, and precipitation, and sensors that monitor ocean conditions from the surface to the bottom. The mooring provides real-time data to scientists on shore.
Photo by Ray Graham
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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