Hourly means for DMS flux, transfer velocity, and associated variables from NOAA Ship Ronald H. Browncruise RB-08-02 in the Southwest Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean near South Georgia Island in 2008 (SO_GasEx project)

<p>These data are hourly mean data for DMS flux, transfer velocity,<br /> and associated variables. Most associated variables are derived<br /> from the Univ. Conn.10 min meteorological data product (Sept 2009 version).<br /> Seawater DMS data are from S. Archer, Plymouth Mar...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dr Byron Blomquist, Dr Barry Huebert, Burke Hales
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO) 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:1ed0cdc3017f1d6d9a127f91a86d52fce16fa5f90e76ee4d7bcee2364ec92881
Description
Summary:<p>These data are hourly mean data for DMS flux, transfer velocity,<br /> and associated variables. Most associated variables are derived<br /> from the Univ. Conn.10 min meteorological data product (Sept 2009 version).<br /> Seawater DMS data are from S. Archer, Plymouth Marine Labs, Jan 2010 release.<br /> <br /> Notes:<br /> 1) DMS flux and transfer velocity measurements have been filtered to remove hours<br /> of atmospheric stability when z/L &gt; 0.05.<br /> <br /> 2) Additional periods of anamalously low flux during the first tracer patch and the<br /> high wind event on transit to Uruguay are not presented in this release. We<br /> are currently examining this data to better understand the reason for the low<br /> results. For access to these measurements contact the investigators.<br /> <br /> Contact: Barry Huebert, University of Hawaii Oceanography, huebert@hawaii.edu</p>