A standard ARGO style float, called the Sounding Oceanographic Lagrangian Explorer (SOLO and SOLO-II).
To control the buoyancy of the float, a small amount of oil is contained within the float. When the float is submerged, all of the oil is kept entirely within the hull. When it is time to rise to the surface, the oil is pumped into an external rubber bladder that expands. Since the weight of the float does not change but its volume increases when the bladder expands, the float becomes more buoyant and floats to the surface. Similarly, when the float is on the surface and it is time to submerge, the oil is withdrawn from the bladder into the hull of the float and the buoyancy decreases.
Dataset Name | PI-Supplied Description | PI-Supplied Name |
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Original transmitted-light imagery and processed attenuance images of sinking particles observed by autonomous Carbon Flux Explorers deployed 100-500m in the California Current Regime, during the CCE-LTER process study (P1706) between June 2 and July 1, 2 | The Carbon Flux Explorer is built on a standard ARGO style float, called the Sounding Oceanographic Lagrangian Explorer (SOLO and SOLO-II). The float is the buoyancy engine for the CFE and also manages all satellite communication of data from the CFE. The top of the float has an integrated Seabird CTD system. Temperature, pressure, and salinity data are read in bursts at 10 minute intervals as the CFE is monitoring flux at depth. These data are merged with the imagery meta data. All CFEs also report profile data when they are surfacing after completion of a dive. I can provide these separately. In addition CFE-Cals also log data as they sink to depth. | SOLO |
CTD profile data from Carbon Flux Explorers deployed 100-500m in the California Current Regime, during the CCE-LTER process study (P1706) between June 2 and July 1, 2017 | Data are derived from the Seabird 41 CTD integrated with Sounding Oceanographic Lagrangian Observer (SOLO) float of the Carbon Flux Explorer (CFE). | SOLO |