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

Pioneer Array mooring subsurface flotation spheres staged on the dock.

Pioneer Array mooring subsurface flotation spheres staged on the dock.
Pioneer Array mooring subsurface flotation spheres staged on the dock.
Pioneer Array mooring subsurface flotation spheres staged on the dock.
Pioneer Array mooring subsurface flotation spheres staged on the dock.
Comments (0)
285676
Kostel, Kenneth
Pioneer Array mooring subsurface flotation spheres staged on the dock.
Still Image
09/01/2016
graphics/Pioneer_mooringballs/_N806101.JPG
Image Of the Day caption:
Large orange floats line the edge of the WHOI dock. In a couple of weeks, they'll board the R/V Neil Armstrong bound for the Pioneer Array, an ocean observatory about 100 miles south of the New England coast. These floats, known as "subsurface flotation spheres," are one component of a profiler mooring. A sphere is attached to the mooring's underwater cable to give it the buoyancy it needs to stay as vertical as possible. That in turn allows a sensor-laden device called a wire-following profiler to travel up and down the mooring cable, measuring temperature, salinity, oxygen, and other seawater characteristics.
Photo by Ken Kostel
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Labels
This item includes these files
Collections