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  1. McPhaden, Michael (Ed.)
    Abstract As part of a National Oceanographic Partnership Program (NOPP) project, seven teams—comprising investigators from universities, federal laboratories, and industry—are collaboratively investigating the generation, propagation, and dissipation of internal waves in the global ocean using complementary, state-of-the-art observations and model simulations. Internal waves, generated by the interaction of tides, winds, and mean flows, permeate the ocean and influence its physical state. Internal waves transport scalar and vector properties—both geographically and across scales—and contribute to irreversible mixing, modulate acoustic propagation, and complicate the identification of subinertial (e.g., geostrophic) flows in observations. For these reasons, accurately representing internal waves in global ocean forecast models is a high priority. The collaborations reported here are improving the understanding of the internal wave life cycle and enhancing model skill in simulating it. Three observational teams are collecting in situ data using 1) redeployable moored arrays that resolve internal waves from multiple directions, 2) global deployments of profiling floats that measure internal wave energy fluxes, shear, and mixing, and 3) high-resolution arrays that focus on bottom boundary layer processes. Four modeling teams are guiding the design and placement of these observation platforms and are using the collected observations to 1) improve internal wave representation and dissipation in ocean models, 2) conduct high-resolution process studies, and 3) implement data assimilation in idealized, regional, and global simulations. These efforts are further supported by high-resolution sea surface height measurements from the new Surface Water and Ocean Topography (SWOT) satellite, which provide context for in situ observations and improve ocean forecasting systems. Significance StatementA collaboration among scientists from U.S. universities, national laboratories, and industry is advancing our understanding and prediction of internal waves in the global ocean. These waves—characterized by vertical scales of tens to hundreds of meters and horizontal scales of tens to hundreds of kilometers—play a critical role in maritime commerce, naval operations, and ocean circulation. The team integrates novel observational approaches, including internal wave–resolving moored arrays, ship-of-opportunity float deployments, bottom boundary layer–distributed sensor networks, and satellite wide-swath altimetry, with cutting-edge global, regional, and process-model simulations. Together, these efforts are improving the representation of internal wave processes in ocean models and enhancing their predictive capabilities for operational forecasts. 
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  2. Bouchard, Courtney; Weathers, Katharine (Ed.)
    Collection of temperature, salinity, ocean currents, and temperature variance dissipation (chi) profiles gridded on 1-meter pressure levels from profiling EM-APEX floats deployed in all ocean basins during the Sampling Quantitative Internal Waves Distribution (SQUID) experiment funded by the National Science Foundation as part of the Global Internal Waves project of the National Oceanographic Partnership Program (NOPP). There are 5 NetCDF files included in this package and are described in the readme.txt provided. 
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