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Particle physics, nuclear physics, condensed matter, plasma physics, optics, acoustics, quantum mechanics
6,311 datasets
Log-odds coefficients, robust standard errors, and odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals for predictors of flood adaptation measures. Mikhail Sirenko published this 10.5 KB Excel file on figshare under a CC-BY-4.0 license, last updated in March 2026. The results include Benjamini–Hochberg false discovery rate-adjusted significance markers and exclude households reporting prior adoption.
Data and code supporting a manuscript and its supplementary information on topological acoustic synapses. The dataset is hosted by Harvard Dataverse and was contributed by author Jinli Chen. It was last updated on May 1, 2026.
Annual reports from 2011 onward, mandated by the Canada-Colombia Free Trade Agreement, detail human rights effects in both countries. The reports are drafted by Global Affairs Canada and the Republic of Colombia for legislative review.
MORTHA is a dataset of thermal anomaly severity for Morocco, derived from FIRMS and Sentinel-2 satellite data. It covers the period from 2024 to 2026. The author and organization are unknown.
Geoscience Australia Data provides a geological study on the hydrocarbon and geothermal prospectivity of stacked sedimentary basins in Central Australia. The analysis covers the Warburton, Cooper, Pedirka, Galilee, Simpson, and Eromanga Basins, focusing on their evolution from the Carboniferous to the Cainozoic era. It details the deposition of continental sediments, including thick coal measures, and subsequent tectonic events.
Geoscience Australia Data provides a post-cruise report detailing light hydrocarbon gas (C1-C6) measurements in sediments from 342 locations on the continental shelf and slope. The data identifies thermogenic hydrocarbons at 42 locations across the Otway and Gippsland Basins, collected during a 21-day research voyage in April/May 1988.
Daily averages of plasma data collected by the Voyager 2 spacecraft. The data originates from two Faraday-cup detectors measuring ion velocity, density, and pressure, and electron energy from 5eV to 1 keV. The dataset is provided by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and was last updated in March 2026.
PLAYBOY cruise data contains mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) temperature-depth profiles from the Gulf of Mexico on July 6, 1966. The dataset is processed to the NODC C128 standard format, recording temperature at uniform 5-meter depth intervals up to approximately 285 meters. It was collected by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and is hosted on multiple government data platforms.
North Atlantic Ocean data contains temperature-depth profiles collected using a Mechanical Bathythermograph (MBT) during the MARMER cruise from January to May 1962. The dataset, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into the C128 standard format, captures the thermal structure of the ocean's upper layers to a maximum depth of approximately 285 meters. Each observation includes cruise information, date, position, and time, with temperature recorded at uniform 5-meter depth intervals.
Global oceans contain temperature-depth profiles collected by the research vessel Horizon using Mechanical Bathythermograph (MBT) instruments. The dataset covers a 20-year period from 1948 to 1968 across 15 major seas and ocean basins, processed into the NODC standard C128 format. Data records consist of paired temperature and depth values at uniform 5-meter intervals, useful for studying the thermal structure of the upper ocean layers.
285 meters is the maximum depth for temperature-depth profiles recorded by a mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) aboard the USNS Golden Eagle. The dataset contains observations from a 51-day cruise in the North Atlantic Ocean, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into its standard C128 format. Temperature values are recorded at uniform 5-meter depth intervals for each cast.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) data contains bathythermograph (MBT) temperature-depth profiles from the South Pacific Ocean. The dataset covers a one-month period from September 26 to October 23, 1971, recorded during the CHATYR-DAG cruise. Data is processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into the standard C128 format, with temperature recorded at uniform 5-meter depth intervals up to approximately 285 meters.
Mechanical bathythermograph data from the research vessel Diachenko, capturing temperature-depth profiles in the upper ocean across five western Pacific and Asian seas. The dataset contains observations from 1955 to 1958, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center into its standard C128 format. Each profile provides paired temperature and depth measurements at uniform 5-meter intervals down to a maximum of approximately 285 meters.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration bathythermograph data provides temperature-depth profiles from the North Pacific Ocean, Philippine Sea, and South Pacific Ocean. The dataset contains observations processed to the NODC standard C128 format, with profiles recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals to a maximum depth of approximately 285 meters. Data collection occurred from April 1944 to September 1947.
5800005 is a dataset of mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) observations from the HANNA cruise in the North Pacific Ocean. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration processed the data into the NODC C128 format, providing temperature-depth pairs recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals. It captures the thermal structure of the ocean's upper layers over a three-day period in February 1958.
Mechanical bathythermograph data from the research vessel HUGH M. SMITH captures temperature-depth profiles in the North and South Pacific Ocean. The dataset comprises pairs of temperature and depth values recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals down to a maximum of approximately 285 meters. Data was processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into its standard C128 format.
Bathythermograph (MBT) data from UNANUE in the South Pacific Ocean provides temperature-depth profile pairs for the upper ocean layers. The dataset covers a specific cruise from May 20 to June 7, 1971, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into its standard C128 format. It is published by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and is available on multiple government data platforms.
Approximately 285 meters is the maximum depth for temperature observations in this dataset. It contains bathythermograph (MBT) data collected by HMNZS TUI in the North Pacific Ocean, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into its standard C128 format. The data provides paired temperature-depth values at uniform 5-meter intervals for a six-day period in September 1972.
Temperature-depth profiles from the Gulf of Mexico were collected by the vessel HIDALGO using a mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) instrument. The dataset contains observations from June 27-29, 1962, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center into the standard C128 format. It is published by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and is also listed on NASA Earthdata.
Temperature-depth profiles were collected using a Mechanical Bathythermograph (MBT) from the NOAA Ship Townsend Cromwell in the North Pacific Ocean. The dataset, processed into the NODC standard C128 format, contains observations from a single cruise spanning September 22 to October 5, 1967. It is managed by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.