A brief description of the coastal oceanographic buoy ‘Vida’
Stainless-steel buoy Vida was manufactured and deployed in operation in 2008 by the company Manta d.o.o.. The buoy’s hull is made of stainless steal 6 mm thick. It is 2.5 m in diameter and the height of the upper-most sensor (the anemometer) is 5 m. The buoy is fixed with three chains, which are attached to the buoy’s hull at points separated by 120 degrees around the hull’s perimeter. The chains connect the buoy to three concrete anchors on the seafloor at a depth of 22 m.
On the buoy there are the following instruments:
An acoustic Gill’s Instruments 3D anemometer (height 5 m), a Vaisala air temperature and humidity sensor (height 3.5 m), a Seacat of Seabird T and C probe (depth 3 m) with a Wetlab fluorometer for chl-a measurements, an oxygen sensor ‘Optode’ of Aanderaa, also at a depth of 3 m. An Xsens motion sensor (accelerometer/compass-tilt sensor) is placed in the buoy’s hull just below the top-cover of the hull and under the mast. An AWAC current meter from Nortek As is mounted at the seafloor, at a depth of 22 m. There are three surveillance web cameras. One underwater camera is mounted at the bottom of the buoy at about 2 m depth. The buoy is also equipped with three solar panels and a wind generator.
The coordinates of the oceanographic buoy Vida are: 45° 32′ 55,68” N, 13° 33′ 1,89” E
Real time data from Vida can be obtained here.