An interactive exhibit at the Bush Presidential Library and Museum, located at Texas A&M University, allows visitors to “Make Your Own Oil Spill.” Visitors can “spill” oil in the Gulf of Mexico and South Atlantic Bight by tapping a touch-screen display, then watch the program map the dispersal of the […]

Nancy White and OOMG


Dr. Nancy White, Director of the UNC Coastal Studies Institute, visited OOMG in January 2015. OOMG collaborates with the CSI on ocean wave energy research. Present were (L to R): Roy He, Austin Todd, Nancy White, Jennifer Warrillow, Ping Zhai, Yanlin Gong, Xiangming Zeng, and Zhiren Wang.



Alvin being pulled out of the water as swimmers dive into the sea

mooring deployment


May 2011, NSF SEEP Project Barbados Mooring Cruise. Dr. Roy He at far left.

OOMG members 7/2014


OOMG members (l to r): Xiangming Zeng, Yanlin Gong, Yizhen Li, Jennifer Warrillow, Roy He, Zuo George Xue, Austin Todd, Taylor Shropshire, Joe Zambon, and Zhigang Yao



PI Roy He took a trip to the depths in Alvin, the small Human Occupied Vehicle (HOV) operated from the R/V Atlantis, in early summer 2014. He descended 2500 m into the Gulf of Mexico. Both Alvin and R/V Atlantis are owned by the U.S. Navy and operated by Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. View the […]

OOMG and Debra Hernandez


Debra Hernandez, Executive Director of the South East Coastal Ocean Observing Regional Association (SECOORA), visited the OOMG in March 2014. from left to right: Xiangming Zeng, Zhigang Yao, Austin Todd, Debra Hernandez, Ruoying He, Joseph Zambon, Yanlin Gong, and Yizhen Li. (not pictured: Zuo “George” Xue, Jennifer Warrillow)



This display animates the NCSU SABGOM model-simulated trajectories of surface floats released within the South Atlantic Bight and the Gulf of Mexico on the day of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill (April 20, 2010) and where they would drift for the following six months. To see the trajectory of a […]



The University of South Florida’s Teledyne Webb Research Slocum Glider was deployed off the Atlantic coast of Florida to detect hotspots of reef fish activity in and around marine protected areas. The regional-scale nowcast/forecast ocean modeling system developed by the OMG group at NCSU will assist the glider’s navigation as […]