TROPICAL
ATMOSPHERE-OCEAN (TAO) PROGRAM
FINAL CRUISE INSTRUCTIONS
FOR
RB-04-11
October
27 – December 1, 2004
PARTICIPATING ORGANIZATIONS:
NOAA, Pacific Marine Environmental
Laboratory TAO - Dr.
Michael McPhaden
NOAA, Pacific Marine Environmental
Laboratory GCC - Dr.
Dick Feely,
Atlantic Oceanographic and
Meteorological Laboratory Dr.
Rik Wanninkhoff
NOAA, Pacific Marine Environmental
Laboratory Atmospheric
Soundings- Dr. Nick Bond
NOAA, Pacific Marine Environmental
Laboratory DMS, Dr.
Timothy Bates
NOAA, Environmental Technology
Laboratory ETL-
Dr. Chris Fairall, Dr. Jeff Hare
NOAA, Atlantic Oceanographic and
Meteorological Lab. Drifters-
Craig Engler
University of Hawaii ADCP
- Dr. Eric Firing
Monterey Bay Aquarium Research
Institute (MBARI) Phytoplankton
- Dr. Francisco Chavez
Brookhaven
National Laboratory PRP-
Dr. Michael Reynolds
PROGRAM DESCRIPTION
A
major objective of the TAO/TRITON Array is to facilitate understanding,
modeling, and prediction of global interannual climate fluctuations associated
with the El Nińo-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) phenomenon. To this end, the TAO Project has implemented
an ocean-atmosphere observing array in the tropical Pacific Ocean to
initialize, force, and verify ocean prediction models. The TAO/TRITON Array consists of
approximately 70 ATLAS moorings and current meter moorings within 8-12 degrees
of the equator and spanning the Pacific Basin from 95 W to 165 E. Data from the array are both internally
recorded and reported in real-time via Service Argos. The array is being maintained under sponsorship of NOAA’s
Environmental Research Laboratories as part of the ENSO Observing System for
NOAA’s Seasonal-to-Interannual Climate Prediction Program.
TAO Program Director
Dr.
Michael J. McPhaden
PMEL,
TAO Project Office
7600
Sand Point Way NE
Seattle,
WA 98115
(206)
526-6783, -6744 (fax)
Area: Eastern Equatorial Pacific
Itinerary:
RB-04-11 St. Maarten, NA Depart:
21 October 2004
Balboa, Panama Arrive/depart:
27 October 2004
Arica, Chile Arrive
01 December 2004
CRUISE DESCRIPTION
Cruise
Objective and Plan:
The
objective of this cruise is the maintenance of the TAO Array along the 95W and
110W meridians. The scientific complement will load mooring
equipment on the ship in Charleston, SC during the week of September 13th. The
ship will depart St. Maarten, NA on October 21 and transit through the Panama
Canal to arrive Balboa, Panama on or about October 27. Scientific personnel will embark on October
27, 2004 in Balboa, Panama. The TAO
cruise will complete operations on or about December 1, in Arica, Chile, where
all scientific personnel will debark and all scientific gear will be offloaded.
AMC
Operations: TAO Operations:
LCDR Jim Meigs, NOAA LCDR
Brian Lake, NOAA
NOAA/AMC (AMC1) PMEL, TAO
439 WEST YORK ST 7600
Sand Point Way NE
Norfolk, VA 23510-1114 Seattle,
WA 98115-0070
(757) 441-6844 (206)
526-6403
Jim.Meigs@noaa.gov Brian.Lake@noaa.gov
1.0 PERSONNEL
1.1 CHIEF SCIENTIST
AND PARTICIPATING SCIENTISTS:
Chief Scientist: David Zimmerman
The Chief Scientist is authorized to revise or alter the
scientific portion of the cruise plan as work progresses provided that, after
consultation with the Commanding Officer, it is ascertained that the proposed
changes will not: (1) jeopardize the safety of personnel or the ship; (2)
exceed the overall time allotted for the cruise; (3) result in undue additional
expenses; (4) alter the general intent of these instructions.
A list of participating scientists follows in this set of
specific cruise instructions. All
participating scientists will submit a NOAA Health Services Questionnaire form
approximately four weeks prior to sailing.
Participating
Scientists
|
Name |
Sex |
Nationality |
Affiliation |
|
David
Zimmerman |
M |
USA |
NOAA/PMEL/TAO |
|
Keith
Ronnholm |
M |
USA |
NOAA/PMEL/TAO |
|
Korey
Martin |
M |
USA |
NOAA/PMEL/TAO |
|
Mathew
Fowler |
M |
USA |
NOAA/PMEL/VENTS |
Gary Wick |
M |
USA |
NOAA/ETL |
Sandra Castro |
F |
USA |
University
of Colorado |
Virendre Ghate |
M |
India |
University
of Miami |
Ieng Jo
|
M |
Cuba |
University
of Miami |
|
Henry
Arteaga |
M |
Ecuador
|
Naval
Oceanograpic Institute (INOCAR) |
|
Jeremiah Reynolds |
M |
USA |
Brookhaven
Nat. Lab. |
2.0 OPERATIONS
The
cruise track and details of station work are summarized in Appendices A and
B. The cruise will involve underway
operations (Section 2.01) between stations, including CTD/water sampling stations (Section 2.02), mooring recoveries,
deployments, and repairs (Section 2.03).
During the cruise, it is requested that the vessel provide to the Chief
Scientist an updated operations spreadsheet (similar to Appendix A) with actual
times and speeds made good for the entire cruise. The TAO project will provide regular updates of buoy positions
during the cruise in order to recover those adrift.
2.01 Underway
Operations
2.01.1 ADCP
(Firing)
A
ship-mounted ADCP system will be used to continuously measure the currents in
the upper ocean along the trackline. At a minimum, data from the ADCP will be
logged from the start of the transit once in international waters (or waters
for which there is research clearance) and continue until leaving international
waters. For calibration purposes it is
essential that bottom tracking be activated at the start and end of a cruise
when in water depths shallower then 500m.
The ship's Electronics Technician will be in charge of data storage
(hard drive to disks and/or CD’s as necessary). The ADCP will be interfaced to the ship’s GPS receiver and will
receive data at one second intervals.
The clock on the ADCP IBM computer will NOT be reset while underway. ADCP operating parameters will not be
changed without the permission of the Chief Scientist; in consultation with Dr.
Eric Firing, and after informing TAO personnel of the intended parameter
change. All ADCP data will be provided
to the chief scientist and sent to Dr. Eric Firing at the University of Hawaii.
Accurate
ship navigation is essential for valid ADCP current measurements. The ship will provide a fully operational
GPS receiver and Seapath 200 system (or equivalent) for navigation input. Ship’s ET will select proper GPS codes to
enable ADCP navigation data collection.
The ADCP will be interfaced with the ship's gyro so that accurate
heading information is available to the ADCP.
A manual comparison of the ADCP
heading/gyro reading will be logged by the Electronics Technician while the
ship is dockside, at the beginning of a cruise and checked periodically
throughout the cruise. For calibration purposes, “Bottom Tracking” should be
activated whenever the ship is transiting water shallower than 500m.
Due
to compatibility problems, the ADCP is not interfaced to SCS, so GPS navigation
and gyro inputs must be connected directly to the ADCP system. If the ADCP becomes interfaced to the SCS,
then the ADCP data will be recorded on both the ADCP recording system and the
SCS. Appropriate data storage systems
will be connected to the ADCP system for ADCP data collection. The ADCP data recorded on the IBM has course
and speed information from the navigation data which is exactly time coincident
with the ADCP ensembles.
The
ADCP system will be operated by ship personnel and will continuously log data
to the ADCP zip storage disks during the entire cruise. If necessary, the ADCP data disks will be
changed when full. Full disks will be
labeled and backed up. An ADCP log will
be maintained by the Electronics Technician and a check of the ADCP recording
of heading, time, velocity and navigation information will be done periodically
to ensure the system is operating properly.
Any inconsistencies, such as heading, time, and/or navigation input not
in agreement with actual/expected, will be noted in the log and reported to the
Commanding Officer and Chief Scientist.
Principle
Investigator:
Dr
Eric Firing, University of Hawaii efiring@iniki.soest.hawaii.edu
2.01.2 SST
and SSS
Sea surface temperature and salinity will be recorded continuously with a SEABIRD SBE-21 accurate to within 0.1 C and 0.01 psu. The Survey Technician will translate the data from the thermosalinograph to ASCII. It is the vessel’s responsibility to ensure that the thermosalinograph is calibrated, at a minimum, annually.
2.02 CTD
Observations
A
Sea-Bird 9 plus CTD with dual temperature and conductivity sensors will be the
primary system and will be provided by the program. An oxygen sensor will also be provided for the primary
system. A backup Sea-Bird 9 plus CTD
with dual sensors is also required and will be provided by the ship. A Sea-Bird carousel and twelve 10-liter Niskin
bottles will be used to collect water samples for the analysis of
salinity. A backup Sea-Bird carousel
and spare Niskins will be provided by the program.
At
a minimum, 1000 meter CTD casts shall be conducted at each mooring site between
8N and 8S for sensor inter-comparison purposes. As time permits, additional or deeper CTD's should be conducted
whenever addition of the CTD’s will not impact scheduled mooring work. For example, if the ship would arrive at the
next mooring site in the middle of the night, it is preferable to do CTD’s on
the way, rather than remain hove to waiting for daylight. Another example would be when mooring
operations are significantly ahead of schedule. Note that for moorings with subsurface conductivity sensors,
primarily located along 95W and 110W, two additional profiles should be
collected prior to the mooring recovery for sensor calibration purposes if time
is available. The additional casts will
be to 200 m and only two salinity samples will be collected, one at 200 m and
one in the surface mixed layer to be determined from the downcast profile. The usual 1000 m or deep CTD with 12
salinity samples collected should be done after the new mooring deployment. These 3 casts should be spaced around the
mooring site and not all in the same place.
Beyond
those at mooring sites, CTD's should be conducted in the following order of
priority:
1000m
CTD’s at one degree latitude intervals between 12N and 8S , along the ship's
trackline.
Extend
1000m CTD’s at mooring sites to a minimum of 3000m or a maximum depth of 200m
from bottom.
1000m CTD’s every one-half degree of
latitude between 3N and 3S
If
the time required for a CTD would cut into the required daylight hours for a
mooring operation or would delay the ship from arriving in port on schedule,
the Commanding Officer may omit a CTD, after consulting with the Chief
Scientist.
For
each cast, the CTD operator should be notified at least 30 minutes prior to
arriving on station in order to ready the underwater package and power up the
instrumentation (i.e. turn on the deck unit) giving the electronics time to
equilibrate. The data acquisition
program and VCR should be started just prior to deployment.
Once
the CTD has been deployed, it should be held at 10 m for 2 minutes to activate
the pumps and remove any air bubbles in the sensor tubing. The winch operator should then raise the
package to just beneath the surface being careful to not let the sensors come
out of the water. The CTD operator will hit “markscan” and then instruct the
winch operator to start down.
Descent
rates should be 30 m/min from 0-50 m, 45 m/min from 50-200 m, and 60 m/min
beyond 200 m. An entry in the Marine
Operations Abstract should be made for each CTD cast at the maximum cast depth
by the bridge watch. Ascent rates
should not exceed 60 m/min. If
possible, all 12 Niskin bottles should be closed at specified depths in the
water column. After recovery and data
acquisition is completed, the deck unit
should be turned off.
CTD
data will be acquired and processed on the ship’s computer equipped with
SEASOFT software. The capability to
display CTD data using the SCS system and monitors will be available. The CTD
operator will complete the CTD cast logs.
The CTD operator or bridge watch will maintain the CTD weather log.
Water
samples for salinity analysis will be taken from each Niskin bottle on every
cast (or as specified by the Chief Scientist).
The Survey Technician will run salinity analysis on the ship's
autosalinometer within 2-3 days after the samples are collected using ACI2000
software. The autosalinometer will be
standardized with IAPSO standard seawater, provided by the program, before each
salinity run. Bottle salinity data will
be used post-cruise at PMEL for conductivity sensor calibration.
In order to reduce the cost of standard water needed to calibrate CTD data, the number of salinity samples has been reduced. PMEL proposes taking 8 samples per station instead of 12; not sampling half degree stations; and running 40 samples per standard instead of 36. Questions regarding these revised procedures should be directed to Kristy McTaggart.
The
Chief Scientist in consultation with the FOO will set a cruise CTD operator
schedule for the science party to assist and cover 24 hour CTD operations as
needed relative to the CST’s workload.
Principle
Investigator:
Dr
Gregory Johnson, PMEL 206-526-6806
2.03 Mooring
Operations
Mooring
Operations are scheduled to be conducted as shown in Appendix A. Operations will be conducted from 8S - 95W
to 12N - 95W and then to 8N - 110W thence to 8S - 110W. The following mooring operations are
anticipated, though the work may be changed by direction of the Chief Scientist;
in consultation, with the Commanding Officer.
|
Location |
Mooring Type |
Operation |
Status |
|
8°S 95°W |
ATLAS |
Recover/Deploy |
|
|
8°S 95°W |
Haruphone |
Recover/Deploy |
|
|
5°S 95°W |
ATLAS |
Recover/Deploy |
|
|
2°S 95°W |
ATLAS |
Recover/Deploy |
|
|
0° 95°W |
ATLAS |
Recover(?)/Deploy |
Not Transmitting |
|
0° 95°W |
Haruphone |
Deploy Only |
|
|
2°N 95°W |
ATLAS |
Recover/Deploy |
|
|
5°N 95°W |
ATLAS |
Recover(?)/Deploy |
Not Transmitting |
|
8°N 95°W |
ATLAS |
Visit |
|
|
8°N 95°W |
Haruphone |
Recover/Deploy |
|
|
12°S 95°W |
Haruphone |
Recover Only |
|
|
8°N110°W |
ATLAS |
Visit |
|
|
8°N110 |