35 research outputs found

    Argo data 1999-2019: two million temperature-salinity profiles and subsurface velocity observations from a global array of profiling floats.

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    © The Author(s), 2020. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Wong, A. P. S., Wijffels, S. E., Riser, S. C., Pouliquen, S., Hosoda, S., Roemmich, D., Gilson, J., Johnson, G. C., Martini, K., Murphy, D. J., Scanderbeg, M., Bhaskar, T. V. S. U., Buck, J. J. H., Merceur, F., Carval, T., Maze, G., Cabanes, C., Andre, X., Poffa, N., Yashayaev, I., Barker, P. M., Guinehut, S., Belbeoch, M., Ignaszewski, M., Baringer, M. O., Schmid, C., Lyman, J. M., McTaggart, K. E., Purkey, S. G., Zilberman, N., Alkire, M. B., Swift, D., Owens, W. B., Jayne, S. R., Hersh, C., Robbins, P., West-Mack, D., Bahr, F., Yoshida, S., Sutton, P. J. H., Cancouet, R., Coatanoan, C., Dobbler, D., Juan, A. G., Gourrion, J., Kolodziejczyk, N., Bernard, V., Bourles, B., Claustre, H., D'Ortenzio, F., Le Reste, S., Le Traon, P., Rannou, J., Saout-Grit, C., Speich, S., Thierry, V., Verbrugge, N., Angel-Benavides, I. M., Klein, B., Notarstefano, G., Poulain, P., Velez-Belchi, P., Suga, T., Ando, K., Iwasaska, N., Kobayashi, T., Masuda, S., Oka, E., Sato, K., Nakamura, T., Sato, K., Takatsuki, Y., Yoshida, T., Cowley, R., Lovell, J. L., Oke, P. R., van Wijk, E. M., Carse, F., Donnelly, M., Gould, W. J., Gowers, K., King, B. A., Loch, S. G., Mowat, M., Turton, J., Rama Rao, E. P., Ravichandran, M., Freeland, H. J., Gaboury, I., Gilbert, D., Greenan, B. J. W., Ouellet, M., Ross, T., Tran, A., Dong, M., Liu, Z., Xu, J., Kang, K., Jo, H., Kim, S., & Park, H. Argo data 1999-2019: two million temperature-salinity profiles and subsurface velocity observations from a global array of profiling floats. Frontiers in Marine Science, 7, (2020): 700, doi:10.3389/fmars.2020.00700.In the past two decades, the Argo Program has collected, processed, and distributed over two million vertical profiles of temperature and salinity from the upper two kilometers of the global ocean. A similar number of subsurface velocity observations near 1,000 dbar have also been collected. This paper recounts the history of the global Argo Program, from its aspiration arising out of the World Ocean Circulation Experiment, to the development and implementation of its instrumentation and telecommunication systems, and the various technical problems encountered. We describe the Argo data system and its quality control procedures, and the gradual changes in the vertical resolution and spatial coverage of Argo data from 1999 to 2019. The accuracies of the float data have been assessed by comparison with high-quality shipboard measurements, and are concluded to be 0.002°C for temperature, 2.4 dbar for pressure, and 0.01 PSS-78 for salinity, after delayed-mode adjustments. Finally, the challenges faced by the vision of an expanding Argo Program beyond 2020 are discussed.AW, SR, and other scientists at the University of Washington (UW) were supported by the US Argo Program through the NOAA Grant NA15OAR4320063 to the Joint Institute for the Study of the Atmosphere and Ocean (JISAO) at the UW. SW and other scientists at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) were supported by the US Argo Program through the NOAA Grant NA19OAR4320074 (CINAR/WHOI Argo). The Scripps Institution of Oceanography's role in Argo was supported by the US Argo Program through the NOAA Grant NA15OAR4320071 (CIMEC). Euro-Argo scientists were supported by the Monitoring the Oceans and Climate Change with Argo (MOCCA) project, under the Grant Agreement EASME/EMFF/2015/1.2.1.1/SI2.709624 for the European Commission

    Quasi-Real-Time and High-Resolution Spatiotemporal Distribution of Ocean Anthropogenic CO2

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    Increasing marine uptake of anthropogenic CO2 (C-ant) causes global ocean acidification. To obtain a high-resolution spatiotemporal distribution of oceanic carbon chemistry, we developed new parameterizations of the seawater total alkalinity, and dissolved inorganic carbon from the ocean's surface to 2,000-m depth by using dissolved oxygen, water temperature (T), salinity (S), and pressure (P) data. Using the values of total alkalinity and dissolved inorganic carbon predicted by dissolved oxygen, T, S, and P data derived from autonomous biogeochemical Argo floats, we described the distribution of oceanic C-ant in the 2000s in the subarctic North Pacific at high spatiotemporal resolution. The C-ant was found about 300 m deeper than during the 1990s; its average inventory to 2,000 m was 24.8 +/- 10.2 mol/m(2), about 20% higher than the 1990s average. Future application of parameterizations to global biogeochemical Argo floats data should allow the detailed global mapping of spatiotemporal distributions of CO2 parameters. Plain Language Summary:Age Cy Ocean absorbs the increasing atmospheric CO2 by human activities from 1750s and encourages global ocean acidification. To obtain the human-activity-derived CO2 in the subarctic North Pacific in a high resolution, we applied our empirical ocean carbon chemistry equations using other hydrographic parameters to autonomous biogeochemical Argo floats data. The amount of human-activity-derived CO2 in this region was found about 300 m deeper than during the 1990s and about 20% higher than the 1990s average. Our method allows the development of a system for monitoring long-term trend changes in ocean carbon chemistry similar to other time series stations

    Effectively Detecting Operational Anomalies In Large-Scale IoT Data Infrastructures By Using A GAN-Based Predictive Model

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    Quality of data services is crucial for operational large-scale internet-of-things (IoT) research data infrastructure, in particular when serving large amounts of distributed users. Eectively detecting runtime anomalies and diagnosing their root cause helps to defend against adversarial attacks, thereby essentially boosting system security and robustness of the IoT infrastructure services. However, conventional anomaly detection methods are inadequate when facing the dynamic complexities of these systems. In contrast, supervised machine learning methods are unable to exploit large amounts of data due to the unavailability of labeled data. This paper leverages popular GAN-based generative models and end-to- end one-class classication to improve unsupervised anomaly detection. A novel heterogeneous BiGAN-based anomaly detection model Heterogeneous Temporal Anomaly-reconstruction GAN (HTA-GAN) is proposed to make better use of a one-class classier and a novel anomaly scoring function. The Generator-Encoder- Discriminator BiGAN structure can lead to practical anomaly score computation and temporal feature capturing. We empirically compare the proposed approach with several state-of-the-art anomaly detection methods on real-world datasets, anomaly benchmarks, and synthetic datasets. The results show that HTA-GAN outperforms its competitors and demonstrates better robustness

    Monte Carlo simulation of MOSFETs with band-offsets in the source and drain

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    Full-band Monte Carlo simulation of short-channel Double-Gate SOI MOSFETs were used to assess possible improvement of drain current in devices featuring conduction-band offsets between the source and the channel, obyained adopting non-conventional materials for the source and drain regions
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