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An experimental drifting buoy equipped with Soundnine”s  eXpendable Temperature and Pressure (XTP) sensors was deployed for the UpTempo project, headed by Dr. Mike Steele of the University of Washington, Polar Science Center. The project uses inexpensive buoys to measure the Upper layer Temperature of the Polar Oceans. The buoy was deployed in northern Hudson bay on June 14, 2018 by Canadian research icebreaker CCGS Amundsen. It transmits real-time temperature and conductivity data to 25 meters deep, enabling scientists to measure the rate of surface warming as Arctic sea ice increasingly thins and retreats each summer.

Pacific Gyre Inc. (Oceanside, CA) integrated Soundnine’s inductive modem and seven XTP sensors into a modified SVP drifting buoy. The XTP sensors are accurate to 0.005 deg. C; 10 to 20 times more accurate than temperature sensors on previous UpTempO buoys. The sensors are clamped to a jacketed wire rope tether. They communicate with the buoy through the wire rope using Soundnine’s inductively coupled telemetry.  The small size and streamlined shape of the XTP sensors should improve the survivability of the system through winter freeze-up (ice ridging) and allow this buoy to provide data throughout spring break up and the following summer.  More information and data are available at:

http://psc.apl.washington.edu/UpTempO/BuoyInfo.php?cbuoy=7090&bname1=UpTempO%202018.si