All scientific data collected by the Australian Antarctic program (AAp) are eventually described in the Catalogue of Australian Antarctic and Subantarctic Metadata (CAASM). CAASM can be used to search through AAp data descriptions, and it also provides links to access publicly available datasets, which can either be immediately downloaded or obtained from the Australian Antarctic Data Centre (AADC).

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Citation
Alberello, A., Bennetts, L. and Toffoli, A. (2020) Antarctic Circumnavigation Expedition 2017: motion sensor and GPS data, Ver. 1, Australian Antarctic Data Centre - doi:10.4225/15/5a178ef0e5156, Accessed: 2024-04-26
Title
Antarctic Circumnavigation Expedition 2017: motion sensor and GPS data
Data Centre
Australian Antarctic Data Centre, Australia
DOI
doi:10.4225/15/5a178ef0e5156
Created Date
2017-11-09
Revision Date
2020-01-28
Parent record
None

Description

Raw GPS and ship motion data collected during the Antarctic Circumnavigation Expedition 2016/2017.

Waves in the Southern Ocean are the biggest on the planet. They exert extreme stresses on the coastline of the Sub-Antarctic Islands, which affects coastal morphology and the delicate natural environment that the coastline offers. In Antarctic waters, the sea ice cover reflects a large proportion of the wave energy, creating a complicated sea state close to the ice edge. The remaining proportion of the wave energy penetrates deep into the ice-covered ocean and breaks the ice into relatively small floes. Then, the waves herd the floes and cause them to collide and raft.

There is a lack of field data in the Sub-Antarctic and Antarctic Oceans. Thus, wave models are not well calibrated and perform poorly in these regions. Uncertainties relate to the difficulties to model the strong interactions between waves and currents (the Antarctic Circumpolar and tidal currents) and between waves and ice (reflected waves modify the incident field and ice floes affect transmission into the ice-covered ocean). Drawbacks in wave modelling undermine our understanding and ability to protect this delicate ocean and coastal environment.

By installing a Wave and Surface Current Monitoring System (WaMoS II, a marine X-Band radar) on the research vessel Akademic Thresnikov and using the meteo-station and GPS on-board, this project has produced a large database of winds, waves and surface currents. Dara were collected during the Antarctic Circmumnavigaion Expedition, which took place from Dec. 2016 to Mar. 2017. The instrumentation operated in any weather and visibility conditions, and at night, monitoring the ocean continuously over the entire Circumnavigation.

Records can support

1. the assessment of metocean conditions in the Southern Oceans; and

2. calibration and validation of wave and global circulation models.

Data - AAS_4434_ACE_GPS contains basic metereological conditions acquired form the ship’s meteo-station, gepgraphical coordinates (latitude, longitude and altitude) from the ship’s GPS and ship motion data from the ship’s Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU). These data are stored as time series with a sampling frequency of 1Hz.

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Access

These data are publicly available for download from the provided URL.

Temporal Coverages

Spatial Coverages

Science Keywords

Additional Keywords

  • SHIP MOTION
  • GPS

Locations

  • GEOGRAPHIC REGION > POLAR
  • CONTINENT > ANTARCTICA
  • OCEAN > SOUTHERN OCEAN

Platforms

  • SHIPS
  • R/V AKADEMIK TRESHNIKOV

Instruments

  • Global Positioning System

Researchers

  • alberello, alberto (INVESTIGATOR,TECHNICAL CONTACT,DIF AUTHOR)
  • bennetts, luke (INVESTIGATOR)
  • toffoli, alessandro (INVESTIGATOR)

Use Constraints

This data set conforms to the CCBY Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

Please follow instructions listed in the citation reference provided at http://data.aad.gov.au/aadc/metadata/citation.cfm?entry_id=AAS_4434_ACE_GPS when using these data.

Creative Commons License