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Particle physics, nuclear physics, condensed matter, plasma physics, optics, acoustics, quantum mechanics
6,248 datasets
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration data contains mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) measurements from the UEB 1 cruise in the Caribbean Sea. The dataset provides temperature-depth profile pairs recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals down to approximately 285 meters. It covers a specific period from March 4 to March 19, 1953, processed into the NODC standard C128 format.
Temperature-depth profiles from the upper ocean were collected using Mechanical BathyThermographs (MBT) during 12 cruises of the vessel Tui between 1964 and 1967. The data, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into the C128 standard format, consists of temperature readings recorded at uniform 5-meter depth intervals down to a maximum of approximately 285 meters. This dataset provides a snapshot of the thermal structure of the upper ocean layers in the mid-1960s.
1951-10-15 to 1960-03-16 comprises bathythermograph (MBT) data collected by the USS Brinkley Bass in the North Pacific Ocean. The dataset contains temperature-depth profile pairs recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals to a maximum depth of approximately 285 meters, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into the standard C128 format.
HARMONY cruise data from 1966 provides temperature-depth profiles at uniform 5-meter intervals down to approximately 285 meters. The dataset covers the coastal waters of Southeast Alaska and British Columbia, the Gulf of Alaska, and the North Pacific Ocean. Data was processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center into the standard C128 format.
285 meters is the maximum observation depth for these mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) records. The dataset contains temperature-depth profile pairs from the HMAS Tobruk, collected across multiple seas from 1957 to 1959 and processed into the NODC C128 standard format. Data points are recorded at uniform 5-meter depth intervals.
285 meters is the maximum depth for temperature-depth profile pairs recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals. This dataset contains mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) observations from the HMAS Paluma research cruise in the Coral and Tasman Seas. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration processed the data to the NODC standard C128 format.
Over 2,800 temperature-depth profiles were collected from 11 vessels in the Caribbean Sea, Gulf of Mexico, and North Atlantic Ocean between May 1962 and May 1969. The National Oceanographic Data Center processed this data into the standard C128 format, with temperature recorded at uniform 5-meter depth intervals. This dataset captures the thermal structure of the upper ocean layers during the 1960s.
Multiple sea regions across the Western Pacific and Indian Oceans are covered by this dataset of mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) profiles collected by HMAS Derwent. It contains temperature-depth pairs recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals down to approximately 285 meters, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into the standard C128 format. Data collection occurred between September 1964 and July 1967.
Bathythermograph (MBT) data from the FURMAN ship provides temperature-depth profiles for the upper ocean layers in the North Pacific Ocean. The dataset contains observations processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into the standard C128 format, with temperature recorded at uniform 5-meter depth intervals. Data collection occurred during a specific cruise from July 11 to August 5, 1967.
The Coral Sea, Indian Ocean, South China Sea, and Tasman Sea are covered by this dataset of mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) observations. It contains temperature-depth profile pairs recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals down to a maximum of 285 meters. The National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) processed this data, collected during the QUADRANT expedition from April 1955 to March 1956.
Temperature-depth profiles were collected using mechanical bathythermographs from eight Australian naval vessels across the western Pacific and Indian Oceans. The dataset contains observations processed into the NODC C128 standard format, with temperature recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals down to a maximum depth of approximately 285 meters. Data collection occurred from March 1968 to February 1969.
Bathythermograph (MBT) data from USS John A. Bole provides temperature-depth profiles for the North Pacific Ocean and Philippine Sea. The dataset covers an eight-year period from October 1951 to January 1959, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center into the standard C128 format. It contains pairs of temperature and depth values recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals, focusing on the upper 285 meters of the ocean.
Bathythermograph (MBT) data from the BOREAS expedition provides temperature-depth profiles for the upper ocean layers. The dataset covers observations from the Coral Sea, North Pacific Ocean, Solomon Sea, and South Pacific Ocean. Data was processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into the standard C128 format.
6600301 NCEI Accession contains mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) data from the American Bay in the North and South Atlantic Ocean. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration processed the data into the NODC C128 format, which records temperature-depth profile pairs at uniform 5-meter intervals. Observations were collected over a five-week period from December 16, 1966, to January 21, 1967.
Proactive Disclosure - Position Reclassification provides quarterly information on the reclassification of positions within the Public Service of Canada. The dataset is published by the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat under a mandatory policy announced in 2004. Data is available in multiple formats including HTML, JSON, XLSX, and CSV.
Voyager 1 spacecraft plasma data of the solar wind, collected by NASA. The dataset contains proton speed, density, thermal speed, and velocity components in the RTN coordinate system, with sampling times ranging from 12 to 192 seconds. Data is obtained by fitting a convected isotropic Maxwellian distribution to the measurements.
Voyager 1 spacecraft measured sixteen-channel electric field intensities near Saturn's magnetosphere. Each 4-second interval provides field strengths across frequencies from 10 Hz to 56.2 kHz, useful for event searches and trend analysis. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration provides this edited data with separate calibration tables for converting raw data numbers to antenna voltages.
IMP 6 LANL 1-hr plasma data is a NASA dataset of hourly solar wind parameters, including temperature anisotropy and alpha/proton ratio. The dataset was created in 2003 by the National Space Science Data Center (NSSDC) by averaging 2-minute resolution data provided by the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) over multiple years. Magnetosheath data were excluded from the source data, and this hourly set supersedes previous hourly solar wind data from LANL.
IMP 8 satellite data from NASA provides 12-second resolution plasma parameters from the magnetotail. The dataset includes proton density, flow speed, temperature, and azimuthal direction, as well as alpha particle abundance, temperature ratios, and relative flow parameters. It was last updated on March 13, 2026.
Hourly resolution solar wind plasma data created in 2003 by averaging 2-minute data from LANL. The dataset includes temperature anisotropy and alpha/proton ratio, with magnetosheath data excluded. It supersedes previous hourly solar wind data provided by LANL.