| Oceanography > Issues > Archive > Volume 17 > Issue 2 |
2004, Oceanography 17(2):32–43, http://dx.doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2004.45
Authors | First Paragraph | Full Article | Citation
W. Paul Bissett | Florida Environmental Research Institute, Tampa, FL, USA
Robert A. Arnone | Ocean Sciences Branch, Naval Research Laboratory, Stennis Space Center, MS, USA
Curtiss O. Davis | Remote Sensing Division, Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC, USA
Tommy D. Dickey | Ocean Physics Laboratory, University of California, Santa Barbara, Goleta, CA, USA
Daniel Dye | Florida Environmental Research Institute, Tampa, FL, USA
David D.R. Kohler | Florida Environmental Research Institute, Tampa, FL, USA
Richard W. Gould, Jr. | Ocean Optics Center, Naval Research Laboratory, Stennis Space Center, MS, USA
The physical, biological, chemical, and optical processes of the ocean operate on a wide variety of spatial and temporal scales, from seconds to decades and from micrometers to thousands of kilometers (Dickey et al., this issue; Dickey, 1991). These processes drive the accumulation and loss of living and non-living mass constituents in the water column (e.g., nutrients, phytoplankton, detritus, sediments). These mass constituents frequently have unique optical characteristics that alter the clarity and color of the water column (e.g., Preisendorfer, 1976). This alteration of the ocean color, or more specifically the change in the spectral "water-leaving radiance," Lw(λ), has led to the development of optical techniques to sample and study the change in biological and chemical constituents (Schofield et al., this issue). Thus, these optical techniques provide a mechanism to study the effects of underlying biogeochemical processes. In addition, because time- and space-dependent changes in Lw(λ) may be measured remotely, optical oceanography provides a way to sample ecological interactions over a wide range of spatial and temporal scales.
Bissett, W.P., R.A. Arnone, C.O. Davis, T.D. Dickey, D. Dye, D.D.R. Kohler, and R.W. Gould, Jr. 2004. From meters to kilometers: A look at ocean-color scales of variability, spatial coherence, and the need for fine-scale remote sensing in coastal ocean optics. Oceanography 17(2):32–43, http://dx.doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2004.45.