We use cookies to improve your experience, some are essential for the operation of this site.

Researchers learning how to guide a CTD mission using the computer interface.

Researchers learning how to guide a CTD mission using the computer interface.
Researchers learning how to guide a CTD mission using the computer interface.
Researchers learning how to guide a CTD mission using the computer interface.
Researchers learning how to guide a CTD mission using the computer interface.
Comments (0)
241323
Kowalski, Amanda
Researchers learning how to guide a CTD mission using the computer interface.
Still Image
05/24/2014
graphics/Kowalski/05_24_14/_L4A5775.jpg
Image Of the Day caption:
Scientists and students on board the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Healy gather around a computer to learn how to to guide a conductivity-temperature-depth (CTD) package to the seafloor and back. During the Arctic Spring Cruise in May of 2014 scientists, including WHOIs Bob Pickart, carried out 230 deployments of the CTD to gather information on phytoplankton blooms that occur under the sea-ice. Scientists are looking for clues as to how and why these blooms can begin in near-darkness under the ice before the spring thaw. It was the first-ever broad-scale springtime survey of the Chukchi Sea.
Photo by Amanda Kowalski
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
http://arcticspring.org/
Labels
This item includes these files
Collections