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    Accuracy and long-term stability assessment of inductive conductivity cell measurements on Argo Floats

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    Article (3.382Mb)
    Supplementary_Materials (6.201Mb)
    Date
    2020-12-01
    Author
    Nezlin, Nikolay P.  Concept link
    Dever, Mathieu  Concept link
    Halverson, Mark  Concept link
    Leconte, Jean-Michel  Concept link
    Maze, Guillaume  Concept link
    Richards, Clark G.  Concept link
    Shkvorets, Igor  Concept link
    Zhang, Rui  Concept link
    Johnson, Greg  Concept link
    Metadata
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    Citable URI
    https://hdl.handle.net/1912/27329
    As published
    https://doi.org/10.1175/JTECH-D-20-0058.1
    DOI
    10.1175/JTECH-D-20-0058.1
    Keyword
     Pacific Ocean; Salinity; Instrumentation/sensors; Profilers, oceanic; Quality assurance/control 
    Abstract
    This study demonstrates the long-term stability of salinity measurements from Argo floats equipped with inductive conductivity cells, which have extended float lifetimes as compared to electrode-type cells. New Argo float sensor payloads must meet the demands of the Argo governance committees before they are implemented globally. Currently, the use of CTDs with inductive cells designed and manufactured by RBR, Ltd., has been approved as a Global Argo Pilot. One requirement for new sensors is to demonstrate stable measurements over the lifetime of a float. To demonstrate this, data from four Argo floats in the western Pacific Ocean equipped with the RBRargo CTD sensor package are analyzed using the same Owens–Wong–Cabanes (OWC) method and reference datasets as the Argo delayed-mode quality control (DMQC) operators. When run with default settings against the standard DMQC Argo and CTD databases, the OWC analysis reveals no drift in any of the four RBRargo datasets and, in one case, an offset exceeding the Argo target salinity limits. Being a statistical tool, the OWC method cannot strictly determine whether deviations in salinity measurements with respect to a reference hydrographic product (e.g., climatologies) are caused by oceanographic variability or sensor problems. So, this study furthermore investigates anomalous salinity measurements observed when compared with a reference product and demonstrates that anomalous values tend to occur in regions with a high degree of variability and can be better explained by imperfect reference data rather than sensor drift. This study concludes that the RBR inductive cell is a viable option for salinity measurements as part of the Argo program.
    Description
    Author Posting. © American Meteorological Society, 2020. This article is posted here by permission of American Meteorological Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Nezlin, N. P., Dever, M., Halverson, M., Leconte, J., Maze, G., Richards, C., Shkvorets, I., Zhang, R., & Johnson, G. Accuracy and long-term stability assessment of inductive conductivity cell measurements on Argo Floats. Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology, 37(12), (2020): 2209-2223, https://doi.org/10.1175/JTECH-D-20-0058.1.
    Collections
    • Physical Oceanography (PO)
    Suggested Citation
    Nezlin, N. P., Dever, M., Halverson, M., Leconte, J., Maze, G., Richards, C., Shkvorets, I., Zhang, R., & Johnson, G. (2020). Accuracy and long-term stability assessment of inductive conductivity cell measurements on Argo Floats. Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology, 37(12), 2209-2223.
     

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