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Citation
Schwarz, J. (2010) ACS data collected on the BROKE-West voyage of the Aurora Australis, 2006, Ver. 1, Australian Antarctic Data Centre - doi:10.4225/15/5983f15b3fbde, Accessed: 2026-05-15
Title
ACS data collected on the BROKE-West voyage of the Aurora Australis, 2006
Data Centre
Australian Antarctic Data Centre, Australia
DOI
doi:10.4225/15/5983f15b3fbde
Created Date
2006-03-10
Revision Date
2019-03-15
Expected Date of Data Release
2010-08-19
Data Version
1
Parent record
BROKE-West

Description

Profiles of visible light absorption and attenuation coefficients were measured in the upper 100m of the water column.

Data Acquisition:
The Wetlabs ACS spectral absorption and attenuation meter was mounted on a deployment frame together with a Seabird pump, a Wetlabs DH-4 data logger and two battery packs. This set-up was as recommended in the Wetlabs manual. The logger was set to control the ACS once the on/off magnet had been inserted. The data acquisition program comprised 2 minutes delay time to allow the instrument to be deployed over the stern; 30 seconds warm-up time; 30 seconds flush time during which the pump was activated, and finally 12 minutes of data acquisition. Physically, the instrument was attached to the winch, the magnet was inserted as soon as permission to deploy had been obtained from the bridge, the instrument was lowered directly to 20m, until 1.5 minutes since insertion of the magnet. The instrument was then brought to just below the surface and lowered at 0.5m per second to a depth of 100m, then retrieved at the same speed. Once the instrument was back on deck the magnet was removed to prevent dry operation of the pump.

The data logger received an instrument-specific binary format data file for each deployment, with automatic sequential file numbering. These files were uploaded after each deployment.

Data Processing:

The Wetlabs software program WAP was used to extract ascii data from the binary files. This procedure included corrections for internal instrument temperature and the latest manufacturer's calibration for wavelength. Note that although daily calibrations were performed during the cruise, the manufacturer advised against using these calibrations as conditions were suboptimal (milli-Q water not fresh, environment not totally dry or well temperature-controlled).

A matlab script, acs.m, written by the principal investigator, continues the data processing. Data recorded in air are discarded, remaining data are binned to 2m depth intervals, occasional spurious data with a discontinuity in absorption or attenuation spectra are removed, and a correction is applied to account for differences in ocean water temperature and salinity compared to the calibration conditions. This final step uses first-cut CTD data courtesy of the oceanography team (Bindoff et al).

Not yet complete (as of 2006-03-10):

Remaining spurious data need to be weeded out by hand. These include non-systematic quirks such as occurrence of bubbles or larger particles in the optical path.

The depth needs to be corrected for an offset of some 4m plus the difference between the pressure sensor location and the ACS-inlet location.

Dataset Format:
For each 100m profile, a single ascii file is available, comprising instrument calibration data and a time sequence of attenuation and absorption spectra. By placing each of the profile files from one cruise transect in a single directory, the acs.m routine can be applied to one leg at a time, yielding matlab fields of [station, depth (0:2m:100m), wavelength (87 wavelengths)]. The acs.m script includes details of which CTD station number refers to which ACS file number. This information is also supplied in the station log file jill_brokew_stations.xls.

Acronyms Used:
ACS - Absorption (a) Attenuation (c) Spectral meter, produced by Wetlabs
CTD - Conductivity, Temperature, Pressure.

This work was completed as part of ASAC projects 2655 and 2679 (ASAC_2655, ASAC_2679).

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Quality

Data quality appear good throughout.

The ACS was successfully deployed at all CTD stations from CTD-22 to CTD-118, except CTD-59. See the parent record for details on the locations of these stations.

Access

These data are publicly available for download from the provided URL, and are supplied together with matlab scripts for processing and viewing the data.

Temporal Coverages

Spatial Coverages

Science Keywords

Additional Keywords

  • ABSORPTION
  • ATTENUATION
  • SCATTERING
  • HIGH SPECTRAL RESOLUTION
  • ACS
  • Spectral Attenuation and Absorption Meter

Locations

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

Platforms

  • SHIPS
  • R/V Aurora Australis

Instruments

  • SPECTROMETERS

Researchers

  • schwarz, jill (INVESTIGATOR,TECHNICAL CONTACT,DIF AUTHOR)

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_4292_MICRE when using these data.

Project

    ISO Topic

    • OCEANS

    Dataset Language

    • English

    Orignating Centre

    • Australian Antarctic Division

    Dataset Progress

    • COMPLETE

    IDN Node

    • AMD/AU
    • CEOS
    • AMD
    • ACE/CRC

    Metadata Revision History

      2008-02-08 - record updated by Dave Connell - Distribution field updated. 2010-08-19 - record updated by Dave Connell to publicly release the data. 2017-08-04 - record updated by Dave Connell - basic updates. 2019-03-15 - record updated by Dave Connell for ISO compliance.

    Creative Commons License