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Past
years:
NeMO
Net 2002
NeMO
Net 2001
NeMO
Net 2000
NeMO
Net 1999
Multimedia:
Flash animation
NeMO
Net Video Clips
NeMO
Net 1999 deployment slide-show
Related
links :
About
NeMO
NOAA
Vents Program
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is a breakthrough communication system that allows scientists on shore
to send commands to, and get data back from, monitoring instruments on
the seafloor. It is an outgrowth of NOAA/PMEL's
Tsunami research program, which developed DART,
a system for near-realtime tsunami detection using bottom pressure recorders
and moored buoys. Since 1999, NeMO Net has gradually increased the capabilities
of this basic system in an effort to adapt it to the more complex demands
of a seafloor observatory. Each year since then, NeMO Net has been developed
further, beginning with one-way communication from a digital camera on
the seafloor, to a system with multiple instruments with two-way communication
to a single surface buoy. The goal is to keep developing this system into
a true seafloor observatory.
This year
at NeMO Net: there are two instruments on the seafloor that each communicate
with the surface buoy. One instrument is an interactive fluid sampler
(RAS) at the ASHES vent field, and the other is a bottom pressure recorder
(BPR) located near the center of the caldera. All subsea communication
this year is via omni-directional acoustic modem transducers, which increase
the distance that seafloor instruments can be located away from the surface
buoy. All satellite communication this year is via an Iridium
telephone link.
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