In June 2013 the Institute of Marine Sciences of the National Research Council of Italy (CNR-ISMAR) started the test phase of one of the few Mediterranean autonomous profiling systems installed in a mooring configuration in open sea transmitting daily hydrological vertical profiles in real time through satellite communication. The selected site is the Corsica Channel, a narrow passage between Corsica and Capraia islands connecting two main regions of the western Mediterranean: the Tyrrhenian and the Liguro-Provençal basins. The Corsica Channel represents a 'choke point' for the study of the dynamics and evolution of the Western Mediterranean
Autonomous profiling buoy system: a new powerful tool for research and operational oceanography
Simona Aracri;Mireno Borghini;Jacopo Chiggiato;Sara Durante;Annalisa Griffa;Katrin Schroeder;Stefania Sparnocchia;Anna Vetrano;
2015
Abstract
In June 2013 the Institute of Marine Sciences of the National Research Council of Italy (CNR-ISMAR) started the test phase of one of the few Mediterranean autonomous profiling systems installed in a mooring configuration in open sea transmitting daily hydrological vertical profiles in real time through satellite communication. The selected site is the Corsica Channel, a narrow passage between Corsica and Capraia islands connecting two main regions of the western Mediterranean: the Tyrrhenian and the Liguro-Provençal basins. The Corsica Channel represents a 'choke point' for the study of the dynamics and evolution of the Western MediterraneanFile | Dimensione | Formato | |
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Descrizione: Autonomous profiling buoy system: a new powerful tool for research and operational oceanography
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