Smith, S. R., Bourassa, M. A., & Romero-Centeno, R. (2003). Tropical Pacific wind comparisons: objective FSU versus NCEP Reanalysis products. CAS/JSC Working Group on Numerical Experimentation, Research Activities in Atmospheric and Oceanic Modeling. World Meteorological Organization.
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Smith, S. R., Bourassa, M. A., & Sharp, R. J. (2003). Establishing more truth in true winds. WMO Guide to the Applications of Marine Climatology, JCOMM Tech. Rep. 13, WMO TD 1081, WMO, Geneva.
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Smith, S. R., Bourassa, M. A., & Sharp, R. J. (1999). Establishing more truth in true winds. In CLIMAR99, WMO, Vancouver, Canada (pp. 300–305).
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Smith, S. R., Bourassa, M. A., & Sharp, R. J. (1998). Establishing more truth in true winds. In 10th Symposium on Meteorological Observations, American Meteorological Society, Phoenix, AZ, USA (pp. 253–256).
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Smith, S. R., Legler, D. M., Verzone, K., & Bourassa, M. A. (1998). Assessment of NCEP Reanalysis Flux Fields Using High Quality Meteorological Data from WOCE Vessels. In 1998 Conference of the World Ocean Circulation Experiment: Ocean Circulation and Climate, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada (73).
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Smith, S. R., Maue, R. N., & Bourassa, M. A. (2008). 'Global Winds', State of the Climate in 2007. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, , 532–534.
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Smith, S. R., Bourassa, M. A., & Long, M. (2011). Pirate attacks affect Indian Ocean climate research. Eos Trans. AGU, 92(27), 225.
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Smith, S. R., Bourassa, M. A., & Sharp, R. J. (1999). Establishing More Truth in True Winds. J. Atmos. Oceanic Technol., 16(7), 939–952.
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Smith, S. R., Briggs, K., Bourassa, M. A., Elya, J., & Paver, C. R. (2018). Shipboard automated meteorological and oceanographic system data archive: 2005-2017. Geosci Data J, 5(2), 73–86.
Abstract: Since 2005, the Shipboard Automated Meteorological and Oceanographic System (SAMOS) initiative has been collecting, quality-evaluating, distributing, and archiving underway navigational, meteorological, and oceanographic observations from research vessels. Herein we describe the procedures for acquiring ship and instrumental metadata and the one-minute interval observations from 44 research vessels that have contributed to the SAMOS initiative from 2005 to 2017. The overall data processing workflow and quality control procedures are documented along with data file formats and version control procedures. The SAMOS data are disseminated to the user community via web, FTP, and Thematic Real-time Environmental Distributed Data Services from both the Marine Data Center at the Florida State University and the National Centers for Environmental Information, which serves as the long-term archive for the SAMOS initiative. They have been used to address topics ranging from air-sea interaction studies, the calibration, evaluation, and development of satellite observational products, the evaluation of numerical atmospheric and ocean models, and the development of new tools and techniques for geospatial data analysis in the informatics community. Maps provide users the geospatial coverage within the SAMOS dataset, with a focus on the Essential Climate/Ocean Variables, and recommendations are made regarding which versions of the dataset should be accessed by different user communities.
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Smith, S. R., Hughes, P. J., & Bourassa, M. A. (2011). A comparison of nine monthly air-sea flux products. Int. J. Climatol., 31(7), 1002–1027.
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