Deep-ocean Assessment and Reporting of Tsunami (DART) buoy systems are made up of three parts. There is a bottom pressure recorder (BPR) anchored to the bottom of the sea floor. A moored surface buoy connects to the bottom pressure recorder via an acoustic transmission link. The link sends data from the anchored pressure recorder to the surface buoy. The surface buoy sends the data by radio to satellites such as the
Iridium system. From the satellites, the data travels by radio to the ground, then to the system office by conventional telecommunications. The surface buoy has a two and a half meter diameter
fiberglass disk covered with foam and has a gross displacement of 4000 kg. The
mooring line connecting the surface buoy and the pressure recorder is a nineteen millimeter
nylon line that has a
tensile strength of 7100 kg. A very stable, long lived, very high resolution
pressure sensor is a critical enabling technology for DART's bottom pressure recorder. It is a resonant
quartz crystal strain gauge with a
bourdon tube force collector. When compensated for temperature, this sensor has a pressure resolution of approximately 1mm of water when measuring pressure at a depth of several kilometers. Once the data reaches the surface buoy, the pressure data is converted to an average height of the waves surrounding the buoy. The temperature of the surrounding sea water is important to the calculations because temperature affects the water's density, thus the pressure, and therefore the sea temperature is required to accurately measure the height of the ocean swells. Because the swell sizes of the ocean vary constantly, the system has two modes of reporting data, standard mode and event mode. Standard mode is the more common mode. Every 15 minutes, it sends the estimated sea surface height and the time of the measurement. The two-way communications between Tsunami Warning Centers and the pressure recorder made it possible to manually set DART buoys in event mode in case of any suspicion of a possible in-coming tsunamis. To make sure communications are always in contact and secure, the DART buoys have two communication systems; two independent and a redundant communication system. With these updated and reliable communicating systems, data can now be sent where it needs to be sent around the world. ==See also==