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Particle physics, nuclear physics, condensed matter, plasma physics, optics, acoustics, quantum mechanics
6,320 datasets
North Pacific Ocean and Philippine Sea temperature-depth profiles collected by the MARSH vessel using a mechanical bathythermograph (MBT). The dataset, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC), covers a 22-month period from January 1955 to October 1956. It provides standardized observations of the ocean's upper thermal layers.
NOAA NCEI provides a dataset of mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) observations collected during the DOLPHIN cruise in the North Atlantic Ocean. The data consists of temperature-depth profile pairs recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals up to approximately 285 meters. These standardized C128 format records were processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center and cover a specific two-day period in November 1970.
Mechanical bathythermograph data captures ocean temperature-depth profiles from the J.R. Perry research vessel in the Pacific Ocean. The dataset covers a short cruise from May 22 to 31, 1968, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center into its standard C128 format. It provides a snapshot of the thermal structure of the upper ocean layers during that period.
NOAA_NCEI provides a dataset of mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) temperature-depth profiles collected by the USS BROWN. The data covers a five-year period from March 1952 to February 1957 across the East China Sea, North Pacific Ocean, Philippine Sea, and South China Sea. Observations are processed into the NODC standard C128 format, recording temperature at uniform 5-meter depth intervals down to a maximum of approximately 285 meters.
Temperature-depth profiles collected by the mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) aboard the USS Saugatuck during a 1944-1945 cruise. The dataset contains pairs of temperature and depth values recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into the standard C128 format. It covers operations in the North Pacific Ocean, Philippine Sea, South China Sea, and South Pacific Ocean.
Temperature-depth profiles from the RV Columbus collected in the North Atlantic Ocean during November 1967. The dataset contains pairs of temperature and depth values recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into the standard C128 format. It provides a snapshot of the thermal structure of the upper ocean layers for a specific three-day cruise.
Temperature-depth profiles from the mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) instrument collected during the D. C. BARNES cruise across the Bismarck Sea, Coral Sea, and other western Pacific regions. The dataset contains observations from October 1944 to February 1945, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into the standard C128 format. Each record includes cruise information, date, position, time, and paired temperature-depth values.
Arabian Sea, Bay of Bengal, and other Indo-Pacific regions are covered by this dataset of historical ocean temperature-depth profiles. It contains mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) data collected during the TALUGA cruises from August 1946 to January 1948, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into the standard C128 format. The data provides paired temperature and depth measurements at uniform 5-meter intervals.
Temperature-depth profiles from the U.S. Navy vessel J.K. Taussig, collected using Mechanical Bathythermograph (MBT) instruments across 12 ocean basins from 1944 to 1961. The data has been processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into the standard C128 format. Each observation includes cruise metadata, position, and time, with temperature recorded at uniform 5-meter depth intervals up to approximately 285 meters.
Temperature-depth profile data collected via mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) aboard the USS Mission Santa Ynez in the North Pacific Ocean. The dataset contains observations from a single cruise spanning September to November 1966, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into the standard C128 format. Each record provides cruise information, date, position, time, and paired temperature-depth values at uniform 5-meter intervals down to a maximum depth of approximately 285 meters.
Temperature-depth profiles from the SPENCER F. BAIRD research cruise collected between July 12 and August 24, 1957. Data covers the Bering Sea, Coastal Waters of Southeast Alaska and British Columbia, Gulf of Alaska, and North Pacific Ocean. The National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) processed the mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) data into the standard C128 format.
North Pacific Ocean temperature-depth profiles collected from the vessel C. BERRY using a Mechanical Bathythermograph (MBT) between December 17 and 21, 1965. The dataset, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into standard C128 format, contains pairs of temperature and depth values recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals. These observations are limited to the upper ocean layers, with a maximum depth of approximately 285 meters.
285 meters is the maximum depth for temperature-depth profile pairs recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals. The dataset contains mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) observations from the TALUGA cruise across the East China Sea, North Pacific Ocean, Philippine Sea, and South China Sea. Data was processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into its standard C128 format.
North and South Pacific Ocean temperature-depth profiles collected from the vessel JOHN R. MANNING between July 25 and August 28, 1953. The dataset contains mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) observations processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center into the standard C128 format. Data points consist of temperature values recorded at uniform 5-meter depth intervals down to a maximum of approximately 285 meters.
285 meters is the maximum observation depth for these mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) records. The dataset contains temperature-depth profile pairs from the USS EAGLE in the North Pacific Ocean, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into its standard C128 format. Data collection occurred from April 1944 to September 1945, providing a snapshot of upper-ocean thermal conditions during World War II.
From 1954-01-14 to 1961-01-09, this dataset contains temperature-depth profiles collected by the USS Ingersoll using Mechanical Bathythermograph (MBT) instruments. The data, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into the C128 format, covers multiple seas and oceans including the Bay of Bengal, East China Sea, Indian Ocean, and North Pacific Ocean. It provides a record of the thermal structure of the upper ocean layers to a maximum depth of approximately 285 meters.
Mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) data from the vessel LEOPARD provides temperature-depth profiles for the upper ocean layers. The dataset covers a multi-ocean voyage from 1959 to 1962, processed by the NODC into its standard C128 format. Each observation includes cruise metadata, position, time, and paired temperature readings at 5-meter depth intervals.
This dataset contains bathythermograph (MBT) data collected during the CAYUSE and YAQUINA cruises in the North Pacific Ocean over a two-week period from July 31 to August 13, 1969. Processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into the standard C128 format, it provides paired temperature-depth values recorded at uniform 5-meter intervals down to a maximum depth of approximately 285 meters. The data is useful for studying the thermal structure of the ocean's upper layers.
Caribbean Sea and North Atlantic Ocean temperature-depth profiles were collected from HMS Morecambe Bay between July 11 and September 7, 1956. The NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information processed the mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) data into the NODC C128 standard format. This dataset captures the thermal structure of the upper ocean layers to a maximum depth of approximately 285 meters.
May 20 to June 7, 1961, this dataset contains temperature-depth profile data collected using a mechanical bathythermograph (MBT) during the HIDALGO cruise in the Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico. It was processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) into the standard C128 format, providing pairs of temperature and depth values at uniform 5-meter intervals up to approximately 285 meters. The data documents the thermal structure of the ocean's upper layers for this specific cruise.