Abstract
The New Jersey Shelf Observing System Is a coastal ocean observatory whose primary goal is supporting collaborative Interdisciplinary oceanographie research. The observatory has both a sustained component designed to provide spatial datasets year-round, and a process study component for more intensive measurements during short-term scientific experiments. The sustained component consists of tracking stations for the international constellation of ocean color and IR satellites, multi-frequency multistatic CODAR HF Radars, and long-duration subsurface Glider AUVs. The processes study component uses numerous platforms that include aircraft, ships, propeller-driven AUVs and relocatable mooring arrays. Process studies focused on recurrent coastal upwelling centers and their biological impacts from 1998-2001, and are planned to focus on the Hudson River plume, chemical contaminants, and their biological impacts from 2003-2007. Despite being a research-oriented observatory run by the scientists for the scientists, it maintains a significant societal impact through its website (marine.rutgers.edu/cool), receiving an average of over 60,000 hits/day during the busy summer months.
Original language | English (US) |
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Pages (from-to) | 1680-1687 |
Number of pages | 8 |
Journal | Oceans Conference Record (IEEE) |
Volume | 3 |
State | Published - 2002 |
Event | Ocean's 2002 Conference and Exhibition - Mississippi, MS, United States Duration: Oct 29 2002 → Oct 31 2002 |
All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes
- Oceanography
- Ocean Engineering