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Technological Advancements in Observing the Upper Ocean in the Bay of Bengal: Education and Capacity Building

Tandon, Amit and D'Asaro, Eric A and Stafford, Kathleen M and Sengupta, Debasis and Ravichandran, M and Baumgartner, Mark and Venkatesan, R and Paluszkiewicz, Theresa (2016) Technological Advancements in Observing the Upper Ocean in the Bay of Bengal: Education and Capacity Building. In: OCEANOGRAPHY, 29 (2, SI). pp. 242-253.

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Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2016.56

Abstract

Because the monsoon strongly affects India, there is a clear need for indigenous expertise in advancing the science that underlies monsoon prediction. The safety of marine transport in the tropics relies on accurate atmospheric and ocean environment predictions on weekly and longer time scales in the Indian Ocean. This need to better forecast the monsoon motivates the United States to advance basic research and support training of early career US scientists in tropical oceanography. Earlier Indian field campaigns and modeling studies indicated that an improved understanding of the interactions between the upper ocean and the atmosphere in the Bay of Bengal at finer spatial and temporal scales could lead to improved intraseasonal monsoon forecasts. The joint US Air-Sea Interactions Regional Initiative (ASIRI) and the Indian Ocean Mixing and Monsoon (OMM) program studied these interactions, resulting in scientific advances described by articles in this special issue of Oceanography. In addition to these scientific advances, and while also developing long-lasting collaborations and building indigenous Indian capability, a key component of these programs is training early career scientists from India and the United States. Training has been focusing on finescale and mixing studies of the upper ocean, air-sea interactions, and marine mammal research. Advanced methods in instrumentation, autonomous robotic platforms, experimental design, data analysis, and modeling have been emphasized. Students and scientists from India and the United States at all levels have been participating in joint cruises on Indian and US research vessels and in training participants in modern tools and methods at summer schools, at focused research workshops, and during research visits. Such activities are building new indigenous capability in India, training a new cadre of US scientists well versed in monsoon air-sea interaction, and forging strong links between Indian and US oceanographic institutions.

Item Type: Journal Article
Publication: OCEANOGRAPHY
Additional Information: Copy right for this article belongs to the OCEANOGRAPHY SOC, P.O. BOX 1931, ROCKVILLE, MD USA
Department/Centre: Division of Mechanical Sciences > Centre for Atmospheric & Oceanic Sciences
Date Deposited: 08 Oct 2016 06:38
Last Modified: 08 Oct 2016 06:38
URI: http://eprints.iisc.ac.in/id/eprint/54714

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