Monday, October 17
Aircraft schedule:
- B200 hard down day
- 0900: G-III go/no-go
- NET 1200: Twin Otter SF3 takeoff (weather permitting)
- NET 1230: G-III SF3 takeoff (weather permitting)
Ship and in situ plan:
Monday, October 17
Aircraft schedule:
Ship and in situ plan:
Sunday, October 16
Aircraft schedule:
Ship and in situ plan:
Saturday, October 15
Aircraft schedule:
Ship and in situ plan:
NASA’s S-MODE mission was designed to measure and understand the complex oceanic features classified as “submesoscale,” i.e., features spanning up to 6.2 miles (10 kilometers) across. Such fine filaments and sharp density fronts in the ocean are responsible for fast and unpredictable changes in velocity, temperature, salinity, and even among small organisms called plankton in the surface layer of the ocean. A myriad of autonomous instruments, airborne sensors, and a fully equipped ship are part of the robust methods of measuring submesoscale dynamics in the California Current region.
When the research vessel Bold Horizon sailed from Newport, Oregon, in early October, it joined a small armada of planes, drones, and other high-tech craft chasing the ocean’s shapeshifting physics. NASA’s Sub-Mesoscale Ocean Dynamics Experiment (S-MODE) is converging on a patch of sea 110 nautical miles off the coast of San Francisco. Over the course of 28 days, the team will deploy a new generation of tools to observe whirlpools, currents, and other dynamics at the air-sea boundary.
Friday, October 14
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Thursday, October 13
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Wednesday, October 12
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Science team meeting schedule:
NASA’s Sub-Mesoscale Ocean Dynamics Experiment (S-MODE) is converging on a patch of sea 110 nautical miles off the coast of San Francisco. Over the course of 28 days, the team will deploy a new generation of tools to observe whirlpools, currents, and other dynamics at the air-sea boundary.
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