• Title/Summary/Keyword: Optical Backscattering Sensor (OBS)

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Development of a Time-selective Self-triggering Water Sampler and Its Application to In-situ Calibration of a Turbidity Sensor

  • Jin, Jae-Youll;Hwang, Keun-Choon;Park, Jin-Soon;Yum, Ki-Dai;Oh, Jae-Kyung
    • Journal of the korean society of oceanography
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    • v.34 no.4
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    • pp.200-206
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    • 1999
  • Seawater sampling is the primary task for the study of the marine environmental parameters that require shipboard or laboratory experiments for their analyses, and is also required for the calibration of some instruments for in situ measurement. A new automatic bottle (AUTTLE) is developed for seawater sampling at any desired time and water depth by self-triggering. Both any type of single or assembled mooring for 15 days and manual actuation by using a remote messenger as existing instantaneous single point water samplers are possible. Its sampling capacity and the resolution of time setting are 2 liters and 1 second, respectively. The result of a field experiment with an optical backscattering sensor (OBS) and a total of 14 AUTTLES for the in situ calibration of the OBS shows that the AUTTLE must improve our understanding on the behavior of the sand/mud mixtures in the environments with high waves and strong tides. The AUTTLE will serve as a valuable instrument in the various fields of oceanography, especially where synchronized seawater sampling at several sites is required and/or the information in storm period is important.

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Behavior of Currents and Suspended Sediments around a Silt Screen

  • Jin, Jae-Youll;Chae, Jang-Won;Song, Won-Oh;Park, Jin-Soon;Kim, Sung-Eun;Jeong, Weon-Mu;Yum, Ki-Dai;Oh, Jae-Kyung
    • Ocean and Polar Research
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    • v.25 no.spc3
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    • pp.399-408
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    • 2003
  • The behavior of Suspended Sediment Concentrations (SSC) around a silt screen in a microtidal coastal area was hydrodynamically measured. The current speed at the mid-layer about 30m downstream of the screen reduces to about half that at the same distance upstream. It was caused by the contraction of the vertical section due to the screen. Even during a relatively weak storm period the SSC increases to that of the value caused by dredging. Section-averaged SSC at the downstream of the screen is higher by about 60% than that at the upstream, suggesting that the silt screen plays an adverse effect rather than a constructive role in the reduction of SSC generated by dredging.