Data from the array are telemetered
in near-real-time via
Service Argos utilizing the NOAA polar-orbiting
satellites. The buoy data are processed daily,
calibration coefficients and quality controls are
applied, and the data are made available to the
international scientific community and to the public
in general.
TAO has encouraged scientific utilization of
the moored measurements by developing sophisticated
data management and dissemination sources. These
include distribution of TAO data and analyses through
the World Wide Web
ATLAS moorings transmit daily mean values
from the previous day and the most recent hourly
surface meteorological observations. In order
to reduce battery requirements and Service Argos
charges, ATLAS moorings transmit for 8 hours per day,
from 0600-1000 and 1200-1600 local time. Across the
Pacific array this results in very few observations
reported in real-time between 0600 and 1200
UTC.
Real-time updates of daily mean data are
made to the TAO web pages on a daily basis. In
addition, daily mean ocean temperature and up to 4
hourly surface wind, relative humidity and air
temperature observations are submitted onto the
Global Telecommunications System (GTS) by Service
Argos, primarily for use by operational data centers
around the world. Complete high temporal resolution
data (hourly in traditional ATLAS systems, 10-minute
or 2-minute in newer systems) are available in
delayed mode from the TAO data delivery page after
recovery of the moorings.
Data are also available from the National
Oceanographic Data Center in Washington DC, and the
National Climatic Data Center in Asheville, North
Carolina.
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