Physical data collected from Seaglider SG021 during Hawaii Ocean Timeseries, February 2005 in the Coastal Waters of Hawaii deployed from 2005-02-16 to 2005-05-22 (NCEI Accession 0162292)

Seaglider is a buoyancy driven autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) developed by scientists and engineers at the University of Washington's School of Oceanography and Applied Physics Laboratory. Seagliders are designed to glide from the ocean surface to a programmed depth and back while measuring temperature, salinity, depth-averaged current, and other quantities along a sawtooth trajectory through the water. Seaglider has entered wide use in scientific deployments. They are designed for missions in range of several thousand kilometers and durations of many months. Seagliders are commanded remotely and report their measurements in near real time via wireless telemetry.

Data e Risorse

Campo Valore
access_constraints ["Cite as: Eriksen, Charles; University of Washington (UW) (2017). Physical data collected from Seaglider SG021 during Hawaii Ocean Timeseries, February 2005 in the Coastal Waters of Hawaii deployed from 2005-02-16 to 2005-05-22 (NCEI Accession 0162292). [indicate subset used]. NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information. Dataset. https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/archive/accession/0162292. Accessed [date].", "Use liability: NOAA and NCEI cannot provide any warranty as to the accuracy, reliability, or completeness of furnished data. Users assume responsibility to determine the usability of these data. The user is responsible for the results of any application of this data for other than its intended purpose."]
bbox-east-long -157.648644
bbox-north-lat 23.018252
bbox-south-lat 22.481083
bbox-west-long -158.2904
contact-email ncei.info@noaa.gov
coupled-resource []
dataset-reference-date [{"type": "publication", "value": "2017-04-11"}]
frequency-of-update asNeeded
graphic-preview-description Preview graphic
graphic-preview-file https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/metadata/landing-page/bin/gfx?id=gov.noaa.nodc:0162292
graphic-preview-type PNG
guid gov.noaa.nodc:0162292
licence ["accessLevel: Public"]
metadata-date 2021-01-03T17:46:45Z
metadata-language eng
metadata_type geospatial
old-spatial {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[-158.2904, 22.481083], [-157.648644, 22.481083], [-157.648644, 23.018252], [-158.2904, 23.018252], [-158.2904, 22.481083]]]}
progress completed
resource-type dataset
responsible-party [{"name": "", "roles": ["pointOfContact"]}]
spatial {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[-158.2904, 22.481083], [-157.648644, 22.481083], [-157.648644, 23.018252], [-158.2904, 23.018252], [-158.2904, 22.481083]]]}
spatial_harvester true
temporal-extent-begin 2005-02-16
temporal-extent-end 2005-05-22
Gruppi
  • AmeriGEOSS
  • National Provider
  • North America
Tag
  • amerigeo
  • amerigeoss
  • ckan
  • conductivity
  • density
  • depth
  • eastwardseawatervelocity
  • fluorescence
  • geo
  • geoss
  • moleconcentrationofdissolvedmolecularoxygeninseawater
  • national
  • north-america
  • northwardseawatervelocity
  • oceanography
  • potential-density
  • potential-temperature
  • salinity
  • seawaterdensity
  • seawaterelectricalconductivity
  • seawaterpotentialtemperature
  • seawaterpressure
  • seawatersalinity
  • seawatersigmat
  • seawatersigmatheta
  • seawatertemperature
  • speedofsoundinseawater
  • surfaceeastwardseawatervelocity
  • surfacenorthwardseawatervelocity
  • temperatureofsensorforoxygeninseawater
  • united-states
  • water-temperature
isopen False
metadata_created 2025-11-22T12:06:48.050244
metadata_modified 2025-11-22T12:06:48.050248
notes Seaglider is a buoyancy driven autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) developed by scientists and engineers at the University of Washington's School of Oceanography and Applied Physics Laboratory. Seagliders are designed to glide from the ocean surface to a programmed depth and back while measuring temperature, salinity, depth-averaged current, and other quantities along a sawtooth trajectory through the water. Seaglider has entered wide use in scientific deployments. They are designed for missions in range of several thousand kilometers and durations of many months. Seagliders are commanded remotely and report their measurements in near real time via wireless telemetry.
num_resources 15
num_tags 32
title Physical data collected from Seaglider SG021 during Hawaii Ocean Timeseries, February 2005 in the Coastal Waters of Hawaii deployed from 2005-02-16 to 2005-05-22 (NCEI Accession 0162292)