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Vol. 29: SeaWiFS Postlaunch Technical Report Series Final Cumulative Index

Vol. 29: SeaWiFS Postlaunch Technical Report Series Final Cumulative Index

SeaWiFS Post-Launch Technical Report Series



Citation:

Firestone, E.R., and S.B. Hooker, 2004: SeaWiFS Postlaunch Technical Report Series Final Cumulative Index. NASA Tech. Memo. 2004--206892, Vol. 29, S.B. Hooker and E.R. Firestone, Eds., NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland, 44 pp.

Summary:

The Sea-viewing Wide Field-of-view Sensor (SeaWiFS) is the follow-on ocean color instrument to the Coastal Zone Color Scanner (CZCS), which ceased operations in 1986, after an eight-year mission. SeaWiFS was launched on 1 August 1997, onboard the OrbView-2 satellite, built by Orbital Sciences Corporation (OSC). The SeaWiFS Project at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC), undertook the responsibility of documenting all aspects of this mission, which is critical to the ocean color and marine science communities. The start of this documentation was titled the SeaWiFS Technical Report Series, which ended after 43 volumes were published. A follow-on series was started, titled the SeaWiFS Postlaunch Technical Report Series. This particular volume of the so-called Postlaunch Series serves as a reference, or guidebook, to the previous 28 volumes, i.e., the entire Postlaunch Series, and consists of 4 sections including an errata, an index to key words and phrases, a list of acronyms used, and a list of all references cited. The editors published a cumulative index of this type after every five volumes.

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