How many sensors do we have in the Earth's oceans?

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The discussion centers on the stability and effective resolution of various sensors, particularly those used in weather buoys and other monitoring systems. Weather buoys provide data on temperature and wave height, with the latter having a precision of 0.1 ft. However, they do not measure chemical concentrations. There are extensive networks of weather buoys in the U.S. and other countries, alongside military sensors deployed by agencies like the Navy and Coast Guard. Additionally, there are classified sensors operated by various agencies globally, some of which are not publicly acknowledged. The conversation highlights the diversity and complexity of sensor networks used for environmental monitoring.
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And are any of these sensors stable? What is the effective resolution that we get from these sensors?
 
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Sensors of what? We have dozens (hundreds?) of weather buoys, for example, with lots of sensors on them: http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/rmd.shtml
 
Oh nice. That's a really nice map.

I was thinking of sensors of pretty much everything (so we obviously know temperature from these - but I was also curious about wave height and chemical concentrations).
 
Simfish said:
And are any of these sensors stable? What is the effective resolution that we get from these sensors?

As russ stated, we have hundreds of weather bouys and other countries have their own networks. In addition, the military (especially the Navy and the Coast Guard) have an unknown number of intelligence sensors--on the surface, on the bottom, and likely in between. Finally, there are highly classified sensors located in mysterious places all around the world by numerous agencies--some of which are presumed not to exist.
 
Simfish said:
Oh nice. That's a really nice map.

I was thinking of sensors of pretty much everything (so we obviously know temperature from these - but I was also curious about wave height and chemical concentrations).
Well wave height is shown on them (precision, .1 ft) - click one: http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/station_page.php?station=42099

Not chemical concentrations, though.
 
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