Partial pressure (or fugacity) of carbon dioxide, salinity and other variables collected from Surface underway observations using Carbon dioxide (CO2) gas analyzer, Shower head chamber equilibrator for autonomous carbon dioxide (CO2) measurement and other instruments from G.O. SARS in the North Atlantic Ocean, North Greenland Sea and others from 2012-02-15 to 2012-08-13 (NCEI Accession 0157254)

NCEI Accession 0157254 includes Surface underway, chemical, meteorological and physical data collected from G.O. SARS in the North Atlantic Ocean, North Greenland Sea, North Sea and Norwegian Sea from 2012-02-15 to 2012-08-13. These data include AIR TEMPERATURE, DISSOLVED OXYGEN, Partial pressure (o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Johannessen, T., A. Olsen and S. K. Lauvset
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: NOAA NCEI Environmental Data Archive 2016
Subjects:
DAY
SSS
SST
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/{2930E134-150B-4FC4-A26A-4F6F462F8A84}
Description
Summary:NCEI Accession 0157254 includes Surface underway, chemical, meteorological and physical data collected from G.O. SARS in the North Atlantic Ocean, North Greenland Sea, North Sea and Norwegian Sea from 2012-02-15 to 2012-08-13. These data include AIR TEMPERATURE, DISSOLVED OXYGEN, Partial pressure (or fugacity) of carbon dioxide - atmosphere, Partial pressure (or fugacity) of carbon dioxide - water, RELATIVE HUMIDITY, SALINITY, SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE, WIND DIRECTION and WIND SPEED. The instruments used to collect these data include Carbon dioxide (CO2) gas analyzer and Shower head chamber equilibrator for autonomous carbon dioxide (CO2) measurement. These data were collected by Truls Johannessen, Are Olsen and Siv Lauvset of University of Bergen; Bjerknes Center for Climate Research; Geophysical Institute as part of the VOS_GOSars_2012 data set. CDIAC associated the following cruise ID(s) with this data set: 58GS20120215 The Global Volunteer Observing Ship (VOS) Program is coordinated by the UNESCO International Ocean Carbon Coordination Project (IOCCP). International groups from 14 countries have been outfitting research ships and commercial vessels with automated CO2 sampling equipment to analyze the carbon exchange between the ocean and atmosphere.