CURRENT METER DYNAMICS LANGUAGE - MAC 



COMPUTER - IBM OS/360 



PROGRAM WITH SUBROUTINES AS ESTIMATOR FOR DERIVING POSITION AND EULER 

 ATTITUDE (PITCH AND ROLL) ANGLES SO THAT PRECISE CURRENT METER DYNAM- 

 ICS CAN BE OBTAINED. APPLIED TO A REAL CASE PROBLEM FOR WHICH SIMUL- 

 ATION RESULTS ARE DISCUSSED. THESIS BY MICHEL FROIDEVAUX (JAN 1968) 

 'APPLICATION OF STATISTICAL ESTIMATION TO THE DETERMINATION OF OCEAN 

 CURRENT METER OYNAMICSi. 



INSTRUMENTATION LABORATORY 

 MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY 

 CAMBRIDGE. MASSACHUSETTS 02139 



CURRENT METER TURBULENCE LANGUAGE - FORTRAN 



COMPUTER - IBM 7074 



GIVES AN INDICATION OF TURBULENCE IN THE OCEAN BY COMPUTING MEASURES 

 OF THE DEVIATIONS FROM MEANS OVER VARIOUS LENGTHS OF TIME. OS NO. - 

 57202. AUTHOR — ROBERT R, GLEASON. 



EXPLORATORY OCEANOGRAPHY DIV.. CODE 7200 

 NAVAL OCEANOGRAPHIC OFFICE 

 SUITLAND. MD, 20390 



FLOW METER PLOTS LANGUAGE - FORTRAN IV 



COMPUTER - IBM 360/65, 

 CAlCOMP 

 (COPY ON FILE AT NODC) 



DETERMINES FLOW METER PERFORMANCE AND PLOTS NUMBER OF REVOLUTIONS VS. 

 TIME. OUTPUT GIVES THE COEFFICIENT OF CORRELATION AND STANDARD DEVIA- 

 TION. AND THE REGRESSION LINE AND 1.96 STANDARD DEVIATIONS ARE MARKED 

 OFF ON THE PLOT. CORE STORAGE USED — 31K BYTES (WITH PLOT ROUTINES). 

 AUTHOR — MARILYNN BORKOWSK.I. 



BUREAU OF COMMERCIAL FISHERIES 

 TROPICAL ATLANTIC BIOLOGICAL LABORATORY 

 75 VIRGINIA BEACH DRIVE 

 MIAMI, FLORIDA 33149 



FILM DATA PROCESSING LANGUAGE - FORTraN-60 



COMPUTER - CDC 1604 



ACCEPTS RICHARDSON'S CURRENT DATA FROM A BINARY TAPE SUPPLIED BY IN- 

 FORMATION INTERNATIONAL, INC. NORTH-SOUTH AND EAST-WEST VELOCITY COM- 

 PONENTS ARE COMPUTED FROM THE COMPASS, VANE. RO AND RIO COUNTERS, AND 

 ALL INFORMATION MAY BE PRINTED EVERY TIME SLICE. A HISTOGRAM OF THESE 

 COMPONENTS IS PRINTED AT THE END OF EACH FILM. FURTHERMORE, An ENVEL- 

 OPE OF The current angles and current speeds is Shown at 2-hour inter- 

 vals. FINALLY, 6-HOUR MEANS AND STANDARD DEVIATIONS OF VELOCITY COM- 

 PONENTS ARE PUNCHED ON CARDS FOR FURTHER PROCESSING. 1 200-CHAraCTER 

 RECORDS ARE READ INTO STORAGE BY MEANS OF A MACHINE LANGUAGE SUBROUT- 

 INE. THE REMAINING PROGRAM IS IN FORTRAN. AUTHOR — EMANUEL MEHR, 

 COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING, NYU. 



NEW YORK UNIVERSITY 



SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING AND SCIENCE 



GEOPHYSICAL SCIENCES LABORATORY 



2455 SEDGWICK AVE., BRONX, N.Y. 10468 



DATuBA LANGUAGE - FOrTraN-63 



computer - CDC 3800 



Analyzes the deflections of a tri-moored, subsurface, buoy-caBle array 

 acted on by current- i nduced forces. solution is by the methods of 



PAGE 072 



