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Particle physics, nuclear physics, condensed matter, plasma physics, optics, acoustics, quantum mechanics
6,248 datasets
Mechanical bathythermograph data from the USS Rowan provides temperature-depth profiles for the upper ocean layers across the East China Sea, North Pacific Ocean, Philippine Sea, and South Pacific Ocean. The dataset, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center into the standard C128 format, contains observations from 1948 to 1966. Each record includes cruise information, date, position, time, and paired temperature-depth values recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals.
285 meters is the maximum depth for temperature-depth profiles collected using a mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) aboard the POLARFRONT I. The dataset contains observations from the North Atlantic Ocean and Norwegian Sea over a 14-month period from July 1957 to September 1958. Data was processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into its standard C128 format.
Mechanical bathythermograph data captures the thermal structure of the upper ocean layers during a specific cruise. The dataset contains temperature-depth profile pairs recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals down to approximately 285 meters. It was collected by the COLUMBUS vessel and processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into its standard C128 format.
5500007 temperature-depth profiles were collected by the vessel KIRKPATRICK in the North Atlantic Ocean between March and July 1955. The National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) processed the mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) data into its standard C128 format. This dataset captures the thermal structure of the ocean's upper layers to a maximum depth of approximately 285 meters.
South Pacific Ocean, Southern Ocean, and Tasman Sea data contains temperature-depth profiles from a 1963 research cruise. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration processed mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) observations into the NODC C128 standard format. This dataset captures the thermal structure of the ocean's upper layers over a three-month period.
Temperature-depth profile pairs from the LANSING cruise in the North Pacific Ocean, collected from May 7 to May 19, 1964. Data is processed into the NODC standard C128 format, with temperature recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals down to a maximum depth of approximately 285 meters. The dataset is provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
Mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) data captures temperature-depth profiles from the USCGC Burton Island's 1968 cruise in the South Pacific and Southern Oceans. The dataset, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into the C128 standard format, consists of paired temperature-depth values recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals. It provides a snapshot of the thermal structure of the ocean's upper layers during a specific 12-day period.
1954-05-06 to 1955 12-07 temperature-depth profiles collected by the S. L. Moore vessel in the East China Sea, North Pacific Ocean, Philippine Sea, and South China Sea. The National Oceanographic Data Center processed the data into the standard C128 format for mechanical bathythermograph records. This dataset provides structured observations of the ocean's upper thermal layers.
August 1963 data from the O'BRIEN cruise in the North Pacific Ocean, containing mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) temperature-depth profiles. The dataset was processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into the standard C128 format, with observations limited to the upper 285 meters of the ocean. It is published by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
PAOLINA-T collected 11 years of mechanical bathythermograph data in the North Pacific Ocean from 1948 to 1959. The dataset contains temperature-depth profile pairs recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals down to a maximum depth of approximately 285 meters. Data was processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center into the standard C128 format.
Mechanical bathythermograph data from the 1961 HIDALGO cruise in the Gulf of Mexico provides temperature-depth profiles for the ocean's upper layers. The dataset, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center into the standard C128 format, contains observations from July 17 to August 2, 1961. It is managed by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
NODC-processed bathythermograph (MBT) data from the UNANUE cruise in the South Pacific Ocean. The dataset contains temperature-depth profile pairs recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals, with a maximum observation depth of approximately 285 meters. Data collection occurred from November 13 to November 27, 1971.
Mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) data collected by HMS Lagos across multiple ocean basins from June 1959 to March 1960. The dataset provides standardized temperature-depth profile pairs at 5-meter intervals, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center into the C128 format. It captures the thermal structure of the ocean's upper layers to a maximum depth of approximately 285 meters.
This dataset contains mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) temperature-depth profiles collected by the NOAA Ship Townsend Cromwell in the North Pacific Ocean. The data, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into the C128 format, spans over a decade from March 1956 to June 1967. Each observation includes cruise information, date, position, and time, with temperature recorded at uniform 5-meter depth intervals down to a maximum of approximately 285 meters.
Mechanical bathythermograph data from the USS Lowry provides temperature-depth profiles for the upper ocean layers in the North Atlantic and North Pacific Oceans. The dataset contains observations processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center into the standard C128 format, with profiles recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals. Data collection spanned over seven years from February 1954 to September 1961.
Approximately 285 meters is the maximum depth for temperature measurements in this dataset. It contains mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) data collected by the WATCHMAN vessel in the North Pacific Ocean, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into its standard C128 format. The data spans from August 1960 to September 1963.
Bathythermograph (MBT) data from the UNANUE cruise in the South Pacific Ocean, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC). The dataset contains temperature-depth profile pairs recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals, capturing the thermal structure of the ocean's upper layers. Observations were collected over a 20-day period from November 20 to December 9, 1970.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration provides bathythermograph (MBT) data from HMAS Vendetta voyages. The dataset contains temperature-depth profile pairs recorded at 5-meter intervals to a maximum depth of 285 meters across the Coral Sea, Great Australian Bight, Indian Ocean, North Pacific Ocean, South China Sea, and Tasman Sea. Observations span from April 1961 to November 1967, processed into the NODC standard C128 format.
Temperature-depth profiles were collected using a Mechanical Bathythermograph (MBT) during the NECHES cruise in the North Pacific Ocean, Philippine Sea, and South China Sea. The dataset contains observations processed into the NODC standard C128 format, with measurements recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals down to a maximum depth of approximately 285 meters. Data collection occurred over a one-month period from May 25 to June 28, 1965.
Temperature-depth profile data collected using a Mechanical Bathythermograph (MBT) from the vessel ORIGNY in the North Atlantic Ocean. The dataset covers a 10-month period from September 1964 to July 1965, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into the standard C128 format. Each observation includes cruise information, date, position, and time, with temperature recorded at uniform 5-meter depth intervals up to approximately 285 meters.