The Collaborative O-Buoy Project: Deployment of a Network of Arctic Ocean Chemical Sensors for the IPY and beyond

Collaborators from five institutions worked to build and deploy an Arctic Ocean network of rugged and autonomous buoys (named "O-Buoys"), capable of observing three key atmospheric chemical species, bromine monoxide-BrO, ozone-O3, and carbon dioxide-CO2 through 2017 (with each O-Buoy being...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: William Simpson, Donald Perovich, Patricia Matrai, Paul Shepson, Francisco Chavez
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Arctic Data Center 2009
Subjects:
AON
IPY
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:9f1a69a2-86ce-45bc-a812-f31420e3dbee
id dataone:urn:uuid:9f1a69a2-86ce-45bc-a812-f31420e3dbee
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:urn:uuid:9f1a69a2-86ce-45bc-a812-f31420e3dbee 2024-06-03T18:46:30+00:00 The Collaborative O-Buoy Project: Deployment of a Network of Arctic Ocean Chemical Sensors for the IPY and beyond William Simpson Donald Perovich Patricia Matrai Paul Shepson Francisco Chavez Beaufort Sea region, representing O-Buoy 1, 2, 7, 8, 10, 11, 12, 13, and 14. East Siberian Sea region, representing O-Buoys 8, 9, 15. North Pole region, representing O-Buoy 4 and 6. Hudson Bay region, representing O-Buoy 3. ENVELOPE(-170.0,-130.0,82.0,74.0) BEGINDATE: 2007-09-11T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2016-11-10T00:00:00Z 2009-11-18T00:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:9f1a69a2-86ce-45bc-a812-f31420e3dbee unknown Arctic Data Center AON Dataset 2009 dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC 2024-06-03T18:11:01Z Collaborators from five institutions worked to build and deploy an Arctic Ocean network of rugged and autonomous buoys (named "O-Buoys"), capable of observing three key atmospheric chemical species, bromine monoxide-BrO, ozone-O3, and carbon dioxide-CO2 through 2017 (with each O-Buoy being operational for up to 2 years). O3 and CO2 are two of the most important greenhouse gases that have, as yet, poorly understood behavior in the Arctic. BrO is a reaction intermediate that is involved in the extraordinary ozone and mercury atmospheric depletion that occurs during polar springtime, both of which have strong consequences for human and ecosystem health in the Arctic region. These buoys are immersed through the sea ice into the ocean surface, thereby providing a constant temperature (-1.7 degrees C) environment for sensor stability. The original O-Buoy project funded by NSF included design and testing of the O-Buoy. In the current project, 11 new O-Buoys were constructed and deployed (sometimes twice) along with the four already built. As a pilot project, two of the new O-Buoys included seawater sensors for CO2, oxygen, pH, fluorescence, backscatter, temperature and salinity in addition to the atmospheric O3, BrO, and CO2 sensors. Throughout the project, data from each O-Buoy were subject to QA/QC protocols by automated processing initially, with preliminary data available on a regular basis on the NSF Arctic Data Center site. All final data and metadata are ultimately archived on Arctic Data after final analysis at the end of each deployment (please search under O-Buoy, Matrai and/or Simpson). This network of O-Buoys, coordinated and clustered with other buoys in ice based observatories, enabled the scientific community to first observe and, next, better understand the impact of Arctic surface change on atmospheric composition and chemistry. Outreach was done to many K-silver organizations. Video footage from deployments/recoveries and interviews with colleagues and native Arctic people were contributed to the http://www.arcticstories.net site, the Beaufort Gyre Exploration Project ( http://www.whoi.edu/beaufortgyre/expeditions ), the Nansen and Amundsen Basins Observational System (NABOS-II, http://research.iarc.uaf.edu/NABOS2/ ), and the O-Buoy web site ( http://www.o-buoy.org/ ). Dataset Arctic Arctic Ocean Beaufort Sea East Siberian Sea Hudson Bay IPY North Pole Sea ice The Collaborative O-Buoy Project: Deployment of a Network of Arctic Ocean Chemical Sensors for the IPY and beyond Arctic Data Center (via DataONE) Arctic Arctic Ocean East Siberian Sea ENVELOPE(166.000,166.000,74.000,74.000) Hudson Hudson Bay North Pole ENVELOPE(-170.0,-130.0,82.0,74.0)
institution Open Polar
collection Arctic Data Center (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC
language unknown
topic AON
spellingShingle AON
William Simpson
Donald Perovich
Patricia Matrai
Paul Shepson
Francisco Chavez
The Collaborative O-Buoy Project: Deployment of a Network of Arctic Ocean Chemical Sensors for the IPY and beyond
topic_facet AON
description Collaborators from five institutions worked to build and deploy an Arctic Ocean network of rugged and autonomous buoys (named "O-Buoys"), capable of observing three key atmospheric chemical species, bromine monoxide-BrO, ozone-O3, and carbon dioxide-CO2 through 2017 (with each O-Buoy being operational for up to 2 years). O3 and CO2 are two of the most important greenhouse gases that have, as yet, poorly understood behavior in the Arctic. BrO is a reaction intermediate that is involved in the extraordinary ozone and mercury atmospheric depletion that occurs during polar springtime, both of which have strong consequences for human and ecosystem health in the Arctic region. These buoys are immersed through the sea ice into the ocean surface, thereby providing a constant temperature (-1.7 degrees C) environment for sensor stability. The original O-Buoy project funded by NSF included design and testing of the O-Buoy. In the current project, 11 new O-Buoys were constructed and deployed (sometimes twice) along with the four already built. As a pilot project, two of the new O-Buoys included seawater sensors for CO2, oxygen, pH, fluorescence, backscatter, temperature and salinity in addition to the atmospheric O3, BrO, and CO2 sensors. Throughout the project, data from each O-Buoy were subject to QA/QC protocols by automated processing initially, with preliminary data available on a regular basis on the NSF Arctic Data Center site. All final data and metadata are ultimately archived on Arctic Data after final analysis at the end of each deployment (please search under O-Buoy, Matrai and/or Simpson). This network of O-Buoys, coordinated and clustered with other buoys in ice based observatories, enabled the scientific community to first observe and, next, better understand the impact of Arctic surface change on atmospheric composition and chemistry. Outreach was done to many K-silver organizations. Video footage from deployments/recoveries and interviews with colleagues and native Arctic people were contributed to the http://www.arcticstories.net site, the Beaufort Gyre Exploration Project ( http://www.whoi.edu/beaufortgyre/expeditions ), the Nansen and Amundsen Basins Observational System (NABOS-II, http://research.iarc.uaf.edu/NABOS2/ ), and the O-Buoy web site ( http://www.o-buoy.org/ ).
format Dataset
author William Simpson
Donald Perovich
Patricia Matrai
Paul Shepson
Francisco Chavez
author_facet William Simpson
Donald Perovich
Patricia Matrai
Paul Shepson
Francisco Chavez
author_sort William Simpson
title The Collaborative O-Buoy Project: Deployment of a Network of Arctic Ocean Chemical Sensors for the IPY and beyond
title_short The Collaborative O-Buoy Project: Deployment of a Network of Arctic Ocean Chemical Sensors for the IPY and beyond
title_full The Collaborative O-Buoy Project: Deployment of a Network of Arctic Ocean Chemical Sensors for the IPY and beyond
title_fullStr The Collaborative O-Buoy Project: Deployment of a Network of Arctic Ocean Chemical Sensors for the IPY and beyond
title_full_unstemmed The Collaborative O-Buoy Project: Deployment of a Network of Arctic Ocean Chemical Sensors for the IPY and beyond
title_sort collaborative o-buoy project: deployment of a network of arctic ocean chemical sensors for the ipy and beyond
publisher Arctic Data Center
publishDate 2009
url https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:9f1a69a2-86ce-45bc-a812-f31420e3dbee
op_coverage Beaufort Sea region, representing O-Buoy 1, 2, 7, 8, 10, 11, 12, 13, and 14.
East Siberian Sea region, representing O-Buoys 8, 9, 15.
North Pole region, representing O-Buoy 4 and 6.
Hudson Bay region, representing O-Buoy 3.
ENVELOPE(-170.0,-130.0,82.0,74.0)
BEGINDATE: 2007-09-11T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2016-11-10T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(166.000,166.000,74.000,74.000)
ENVELOPE(-170.0,-130.0,82.0,74.0)
geographic Arctic
Arctic Ocean
East Siberian Sea
Hudson
Hudson Bay
North Pole
geographic_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
East Siberian Sea
Hudson
Hudson Bay
North Pole
genre Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Beaufort Sea
East Siberian Sea
Hudson Bay
IPY
North Pole
Sea ice
The Collaborative O-Buoy Project: Deployment of a Network of Arctic Ocean Chemical Sensors for the IPY and beyond
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Beaufort Sea
East Siberian Sea
Hudson Bay
IPY
North Pole
Sea ice
The Collaborative O-Buoy Project: Deployment of a Network of Arctic Ocean Chemical Sensors for the IPY and beyond
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