Peter Dahl Senior Principal Engineer Professor, Mechanical Engineering dahl97@uw.edu Phone 206-543-2667 |
Research Interests
Underwater Acoustics, Acoustic Remote Sensing
Biosketch
Dr. Dahl is a Senior Principal Engineer in the Acoustics Department and a Professor in the University of Washington's Department of Mechanical Engineering. Professor Dahl's research is in areas of acoustics with primary focus on underwater sound. Examples of his research include underwater acoustic remote sensing, the acoustics of underwater explosions, acoustic scattering and reflection from the sea surface and sea bed, vector acoustics, underwater ambient noise and methods to reduce underwater industrial noise.
He has conducted several ocean-going experiments involving underwater acoustics, including the Asian Seas International Acoustics Experiment (ASIAEX), sponsored by the U.S. Office of Naval Research, in the East China Sea involving the U.S., China and Korea and for which he was U.S. chief scientist.
Professor Dahl is a Fellow of the Acoustical Society of America, has served as the chair of its technical committee on underwater acoustics (20022005), on its Executive Council (20082011), and has recently completed service as Vice President of the Acoustical Society of America.
Education
B.S., University of Washington - Seattle, 1976
M.S. Ocean and Fishery Sciences, University of Washington - Seattle, 1982
Ph.D. Ocean Engineering, MIT, 1989
Projects
Asian Sea International Acoustics Experiment (ASIAEX) The goals of ASIAEX program in the East China Sea were to identify and elucidate properties of shallow-water boundaries governing propagation and reverberation, such as sediment inhomogeniety, sediment roughness, and sea surface roughness, and to establish a geoacoustic description of the East China Sea seabed. |
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Videos
TREX13: Target and Reverberation Experiment 2013 TREX13 is a large-scale, collaborative ocean acoustics experiment supported by both the U.S. Office of Naval Research (ONR) and the Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program (SERDP). |
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5 Dec 2013
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The experiment will take place in the Gulf of Mexico near Panama City Beach, Forida in the spring of 2013 and will involve researchers from both the United States and Canada. |
Mitigating Supersonic Underwater Noise APL-UW and UW Department of Mechanical Engineering researchers are measuring the underwater noise generated by impact and vibratory pile driving at marine construction sites. A double-walled steel sleeve placed around the pile can shield the underwater environment from much of the supersonic energy generated during impact. Vibratory methods to sink piles hold promise to lessen the noise. |
20 Feb 2013
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Publications |
2000-present and while at APL-UW |
Experimental study on performance improvement of underwater acoustic communication using a single vector sensor Choi, K.H., J.W. Choi, S. Kim, P.H. Dahl, D.R. Dall'Osto, H.C. Song, "Experimental study on performance improvement of underwater acoustic communication using a single vector sensor," IEEE J. Ocean. Eng., 49, 1574-1587, doi:10.1109/JOE.2024.3374424, 2024. |
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1 Oct 2024 |
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Underwater acoustic communication is heavily influenced by intersymbol interference caused by the delay spread of multipaths. In this article, communication sequences transmitted from a drifting source were received by a fixed acoustic vector receiver system consisting of an accelerometer-based vector sensor and a pressure sensor, which can measure the three-directional components of vector quantity and pressure at a point. The underwater acoustic communication experiment was conducted in water approximately 30 m deep off the south coast of Geoje Island, South Korea, in May 2017 during the Korea Reverberation Experiment. Acceleration signals received by the vector sensor were converted to pressure-equivalent particle velocities, which were then used as input for a four-channel communication system together with acoustic pressure. These four channels have multipaths with different amplitudes but the same delay times, providing directional diversity that differs from the spatial diversity provided by hydrophone arrays. To improve the communication performance obtained from directional diversity, the Multichannel Combined Bidirectional Block-based Time Reversal Technique was used, which combines bidirectional equalization with time-reversal diversity and block-based time reversal that was robust against time-varying channels. Communication performance was compared with the outcomes produced by several other time reversal techniques. The results show that the Multichannel Combined Bidirectional Block-based Time Reversal Technique using a vector sensor achieved superior performance under the environmental conditions considered in this article. |
Injuries to Pacific mackerel (Scomber japonicus) from underwater explosions Bowman, V., and 7 others including P.H. Dahl., "Injuries to Pacific mackerel (Scomber japonicus) from underwater explosions," ICES J. Mar. Sci., 81, 1685-1695, doi:10.1093/icesjms/fsae116, 2024. |
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1 Oct 2024 |
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This study expands previous work examining the effects on fishes from exposure to a single 4.5 kg underwater explosive detonation. Experiments were done in the field, with fish in cages at different distances from the source. Although our earlier work reported high acoustic dosage levels (e.g. based on peak pressure) correlating with severe injuries, dosage levels that result in moderate, or mild injuries were not clearly established. Thus, in this study, caged Pacific mackerel (Scomber japonicus) were placed at targeted ranges of 150800 m from the source. All procedures were the same as in the earlier study except that animals were left at depth for ~3 hours post-exposure to determine immediate effects on survival. Fish were then retrieved and assessed for physical damage. The only statistically significant tissue injuries were swim bladder bruising and in a reduction in inner ear sensory hair cell density that lessened with distance from the source. Still, results must be taken with caution since they may vary with different source levels, water depths, location of the fish in the water column, and by species. |
Coherence of the frequency-difference autoproduct deduced from high-frequency acoustic fields scattered from a rough sea surface Joslyn, N.J., P.H. Dahl, and D.R. Dowling, "Coherence of the frequency-difference autoproduct deduced from high-frequency acoustic fields scattered from a rough sea surface," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 156, 600-609, doi:10.1121/10.0028004, 2024. |
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1 Jul 2024 |
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The prevalence of random scattering from a rough ocean surface increases with increasing χ = kh cos θ, where k is the acoustic wavenumber, h is the root-mean-square surface height, and θis the incidence angle. Generally, when χ > 1, coherence between incident and surface-scattered fields is lost. However, such coherence may be recovered when χ > 1 by considering the frequency-difference autoproduct of the surface-scattered field, a quadratic product of complex fields at nearby frequencies. Herein, the autoproduct's coherent reflection coefficient for χ > 20 is determined from surface-scattered sound fields obtained from 50 independent realizations of the rough ocean surface measured in pelagic waters off the coast of California in January 1992. The recordings were made with a source at a depth of 147 m that broadcasted 30 and 40 kHz signals to a single receiver 576 m away at depth of 66 m. An analytic formula for the coherent reflection coefficient of the frequency-difference autoproduct, based on the Kirchhoff approximation and a Gaussian surface autocorrelation function, compares favorably with measurements. Improved agreement with the single-receiver measurements is possible via a minor adjustment to the surface autocorrelation length. The adjustment identified here matches that determined previously from horizontal spatial coherence estimates utilizing the experiment's eight-element receiving array. |
On the equivalence of scalar-pressure and vector-based acoustic dosage measures as derived from time-limited signal waveforms Dahl, P.H., J. Bonnel, and D.R. Dall'Osto, "On the equivalence of scalar-pressure and vector-based acoustic dosage measures as derived from time-limited signal waveforms," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 155, 3291-3301, doi:10.1121/10.0026019, 2024. |
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15 May 2024 |
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The dynamic (acoustic pressure) and kinematic (acoustic acceleration and velocity) properties of time-limited signals are studied in terms of acoustic dose metrics as might be used to assess the impact of underwater noise on marine life. The work is relevant for the study of anthropogenic transient acoustic signals, such as airguns, pile driving, and underwater explosive sources, as well as more generic transient signals from sonar systems. Dose metrics are first derived from numerical simulations of sound propagation from a seismic airgun source as specified in a Joint Industry Programme benchmark problem. Similar analyses are carried out based on at-sea acoustic measurements on the continental shelf, made with a vector sensor positioned 1.45 m off the seabed. These measurements are on transient time-limited signals from multiple underwater explosive sources at differing ranges, and from a towed, sonar source. The study demonstrates, both numerically and experimentally, that under many realistic scenarios, kinematic based acoustic dosage metrics within the water column can be evaluated using acoustic pressure measurements. |
Coherent reflection recovery in scattering from the ocean surface using the frequency-difference autoproduct Joslyn, N.J., P.H. Dahl, and D.R. Dowling, "Coherent reflection recovery in scattering from the ocean surface using the frequency-difference autoproduct," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 155, 1868-1880, doi:10.1121/10.0025234, 2024. |
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1 Mar 2024 |
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The coherence of rough sea-surface-scattered acoustic fields decreases with increasing frequency. The frequency-difference autoproduct, a quadratic product of acoustic fields at nearby frequencies, mimics a genuine field at the difference frequency. In rough-surface scattering, the autoproduct's lower effective frequency decreases the apparent surface roughness, restoring coherent reflection. Herein, the recovery of coherent reflection in sea surface scattering via the frequency-difference autoproduct is examined for data collected off the coast of New Jersey during the Shallow Water '06 (SW06) experiment. An acoustic source at depth 40 m and receiver at depth 24.3 m and range 200 m interrogated 160 independent realizations of the ocean surface. The root mean square surface height h was 0.167 m, and broadcast frequencies were 1420 kHz, so that 2.5 ≤ kh cos θ ≥ 3.7 for acoustic wavenumber k and incidence angle θ. Measured autoproducts, constructed from scattered constituent fields, show significant coherent reflection at sufficiently low difference frequencies. Theoretical results, using the Kirchhoff approximation and a non-analytic surface autocorrelation function, agree with experimental findings. The match is improved using a numerical strategy, exploiting the relationship between autoproduct-based coherence recovery, the ocean-surface autocorrelation function, and the ocean-surface height spectrum. Error bars computed from Monte Carlo scattering simulations support the validity of the measured coherence recovery. |
Active intensity vortex and stagnation point singularities in a shallow underwater waveguide Dahl, P.H., D.R. Dall'Osto, and W.S. Hodgkiss, "Active intensity vortex and stagnation point singularities in a shallow underwater waveguide," J. Acoustic. Soc. Am., 154, 1482-1492, doi:10.1121/10.0020836, 2023. |
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11 Sep 2023 |
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Vector acoustic properties of a narrowband acoustic field are observed as a function of range from a source towed in waters of depth 77 m on the New England Mud Patch. At the source frequency (43 Hz), the waveguide supported three trapped modes, with mode 2 weakly excited owing to the towed source depth. The receiving sensor was positioned 1.45 m above the seafloor with a sampling range aperture of 2500 m. The vector acoustics observations enabled study of vortex regions that encompass two singular points for active acoustic intensity: the vortex point, which is co-located with a dislocation, and stagnation point. Interpretative modeling, based on the normal modes and using a geoacoustic model consistent with those emerging from studies conducted at this location, is in agreement with these measurements. Model-data comparisons were based on the first-order variables of acoustic pressure and velocity along with inverse Hankel transforms, which yield normalized horizontal wavenumber spectra, and second-order variables in the form of horizontal and vertical intensity as well as non-dimensional intensity-based ratios. These measures provide a degree of observational confirmation of some vortex region properties. Both observations and modeling point to a gradual deepening of such regions with increasing range owing to sediment attenuation. |
Vector acoustic properties of underwater noise from impact pile driving measured within the water column Dahl, P.H., A. MacGillivray, and R. Racca, "Vector acoustic properties of underwater noise from impact pile driving measured within the water column," Front. Mar. Sci., 10, doi:10.3389/fmars.2023.1146095, 2023. |
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29 Mar 2023 |
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Vector acoustic properties of the underwater noise originating from impact pile driving on steel piles has been studied, including the identification of features of Mach wave radiation associated with the radial expansion of the pile upon hammer impact. The data originate from a 2005 study conducted in Puget Sound in the U.S. state of Washington, and were recorded on a four-channel hydrophone system mounted on a tetrahedral frame. The frame system measured the gradient of acoustic pressure in three dimensions (hydrophone separation 0.5 m) from which estimates of kinematic quantities, such as acoustic velocity and acceleration exposure spectral density, were derived. With frame at a depth of 5 m in waters 10 m deep, the data provide an important look at vector acoustic properties from impact pile driving within the water column. Basic features of the Mach wave are observed in both dynamic (pressure) and kinematic measurements, most notably the delay time T leading to spectral peaks separated in frequency by 1/T ~106 Hz, where T equals the travel time of the pile radial deformation over twice the length of the pile. For the two piles studied at range 10 and 16 m, the strike-averaged sound exposure level (SEL) was ~177 dB re 1μPa2 |
The sound from underwater explosions Dall'Osto, D.R., P.H. Dahl, and N.R. Chapman, "The sound from underwater explosions," Acoustics Today, 19, 12-19, 2023. |
1 Mar 2023 |
Potential and kinetic energy of underwater noise measured below a passing ship and response to sub-bottom layering Dahl, P.H., and D.R. Dall'Osto, "Potential and kinetic energy of underwater noise measured below a passing ship and response to sub-bottom layering," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 152, 3648-3658, doi:10.1121/10.0016510, 2022. |
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19 Dec 2022 |
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Observed near the seafloor, broadband noise emissions from a vessel passing directly above exhibit frequency bands where potential acoustic energy is greater than kinetic energy while the opposite occurs in neighboring frequency bands. The condition where the dynamic and kinematic energy forms differ in this manner is characteristic to interference involving steep angles or near-normal incidence reflection from the seafloor. Measurements are made at two experimental sites using a research vessel passing above a vector sensor, positioned ~1.5 m above the seabed, resulting in a vessel horizontal range approaching ~0. The data are expressed as a ratio of kinetic to potential energy in decibels and yield information on seabed properties. A model for kinetic and potential energy is developed from the method of images using a layered seabed and is used to invert data collected in Puget Sound. A higher-impedance seabed is identified via inversion, which is consistent with the thin Holocene sediments in the region. For data collected on the New England Mud Patch, the model is instead applied directly to nominal seabed parameters originating from prior studies that identify a low-speed mud layer atop a higher-speed transition layer separating the mud substrate from a sediment basement. |
Physical effects of sound exposure from underwater explosions on Pacific mackerel (Scomber japonicus): Effects on the inner ear Smith, M.E., A.W. Accomando, V. Bowman, B.M. Casper, P.H. Dahl, A.K. Jenkins, S. Kotecki, and A.N. Popper, "Physical effects of sound exposure from underwater explosions on Pacific mackerel (Scomber japonicus): Effects on the inner ear," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 152, 733-744, doi:10.1121/10.0012991, 2022. |
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1 Aug 2022 |
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Studies of the effects of sounds from underwater explosions on fishes have not included examination of potential effects on the ear. Caged Pacific mackerel (Scomber japonicus) located at seven distances (between approximately 35 and 800 m) from a single detonation of 4.5 kg of C4 explosives were exposed. After fish were recovered from the cages, the sensory epithelia of the saccular region of the inner ears were prepared and then examined microscopically. The number of hair cell (HC) ciliary bundles was counted at ten preselected 2500 μm2 regions. HCs were significantly reduced in fish exposed to the explosion as compared to the controls. The extent of these differences varied by saccular region, with damage greater in the rostral and caudal ends and minimal in the central region. The extent of effect also varied in animals at different distances from the explosion, with damage occurring in fish as far away as 400 m. While extrapolation to other species and other conditions (e.g., depth, explosive size, and distance) must be performed with extreme caution, the effects of explosive sounds should be considered when environmental impacts are estimated for marine projects. |
Physical effects of sound exposure from underwater explosions on Pacific mackerel (Scomber japonicus): Effects on non-auditory tissues Jenkins, A.K., P.H. Dahl, S.E. Kotecki, V. Bowman, B. Casper, C. Boerger, and A.N. Popper, "Physical effects of sound exposure from underwater explosions on Pacific mackerel (Scomber japonicus): Effects on non-auditory tissues," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 151, 3947-3956, doi:10.1121/10.0011587, 2022. |
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1 Jun 2022 |
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Underwater explosions from activities such as construction, demolition, and military activities can damage non-auditory tissues in fishes. To better understand these effects, Pacific mackerel (Scomber japonicus) were placed in mid-depth cages with water depth of approximately 19.5 m and exposed at distances of 21 to 807 m to a single mid-depth detonation of C4 explosive (6.2 kg net explosive weight). Following exposure, potential correlations between blast acoustics and observed physical effects were examined. Primary effects were damage to the swim bladder and kidney that exceeded control levels at ≤333 m from the explosion [peak sound pressure level 226 dB re 1 μPa, sound exposure level (SEL) 196 dB re 1 μPa2 s, pressure impulse 98 Pa s]. A proportion of fish were dead upon retrieval at 2640 min post exposure in 6 of 12 cages located ≤157 m from the explosion. All fish that died within this period suffered severe injuries, especially swim bladder and kidney rupture. Logistic regression models demonstrated that fish size or mass was not important in determining susceptibility to injury and that peak pressure and SEL were better predictors of injury than was pressure impulse. |
Vector acoustic and polarization properties of underwater ship noise Dahl, P.H., and J. Bonnel, "Vector acoustic and polarization properties of underwater ship noise," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 151, 3818-3827, doi:10.1121/10.0011410, 2022. |
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1 Jun 2022 |
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Vector acoustic field properties measured during the 2017 Seabed Characterization Experiment (SBCEX17) are presented. The measurements were made using the Intensity Vector Autonomous Recorder (IVAR) that records acoustic pressure and acceleration from which acoustic velocity is obtained. Potential and kinetic energies of underwater noise from two ship sources, computed in decidecimal bands centered between 25630 Hz, are equal within calibration uncertainty of ±1.5 dB, representing a practical result towards the inference of kinematic properties from pressure-only measurements. Bivariate signals limited to two acoustic velocity components are placed in the context of the Stokes framework to describe polarization properties, such as the degree of polarization, which represents a statistical measure of the dispersion of the polarization properties. A bivariate signal composed of vertical and radial velocity components within a narrow frequency band centered at 63 Hz representing different measures of circularity and degree of polarization is examined in detail, which clearly demonstrates properties of bivariate signal trajectory. An examination of the bivariate signal composed of the two horizontal components of velocity within decidecimal bands centered at 63 Hz and 250 Hz demonstrates the importance of the degree of polarization in bearing estimation of moving sources. |
The detection of seismicity on icy ocean worlds by single-station and small-aperture seismometer arrays Marusiak, A.G., and 9 others including P. Dahl, "The detection of seismicity on icy ocean worlds by single-station and small-aperture seismometer arrays," Earth Space Sci., 9, doi:10.1029/2021EA002065, 2022. |
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1 Mar 2022 |
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To better prepare for future planetary missions, we deployed seismometers on glaciers and ice sheets, environments on Earth that mimic those of icy ocean worlds. We compare the ability of a single seismometer versus several seismometers in detecting different types of earth and ice quakes and to compare widely different sites with respect to local environmental noise such as ice cracking, melt water from the glacier, and rock falls off nearby mountains. We find that multiple instruments separated by only 1 m can better detect large tectonic events than only one instrument. Further, if the site has low level of environment noise, we detect more large tectonic events. Small local events, however, can help characterize the local environment. We also detected events from equipment left at our field site. Future missions would benefit from sending multiple seismometers instead of just one. If a mission wants to study the whole planet or moon, then the landing site should be situated away from any active surface features and a single seismometer should be sufficient. If the goal is to study a specific active feature or region, then the landing site needs to be close to that feature. |
Polarization of ocean acoustic normal modes Bonnel, J., J. Flamant, D.R. Dall'Osto, N. Le Bihan, and P.H. Dahl, "Polarization of ocean acoustic normal modes," J. Acoust. Soc. Amer., 150, 1897-1911, doi:10.1121/10.0006108, 2021. |
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1 Sep 2021 |
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In ocean acoustics, shallow water propagation is conveniently described using normal mode propagation. This article proposes a framework to describe the polarization of normal modes, as measured using a particle velocity sensor in the water column. To do so, the article introduces the Stokes parameters, a set of four real-valued quantities widely used to describe polarization properties in wave physics, notably for light. Stokes parameters of acoustic normal modes are theoretically derived, and a signal processing framework to estimate them is introduced. The concept of the polarization spectrogram, which enables the visualization of the Stokes parameters using data from a single vector sensor, is also introduced. The whole framework is illustrated on simulated data as well as on experimental data collected during the 2017 Seabed Characterization Experiment. By introducing the Stokes framework used in many other fields, the article opens the door to a large set of methods developed and used in other contexts but largely ignored in ocean acoustics. |
Range-dependent inversion for seabed parameters using vector acoustic measurements of underwater ship noise Dahl, P.H., and D.R. Dall'Osto, "Range-dependent inversion for seabed parameters using vector acoustic measurements of underwater ship noise," IEEE J. Ocean. Eng., EOR, doi:10.1109/JOE.2021.3086880, 2021. |
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20 Jul 2021 |
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The Intensity Vector Autonomous Recorder (IVAR) measures acoustic particle velocity and pressure simultaneously. IVAR was deployed on the seabed during the 2017 Seabed Characterization Experiment (SBCEX) with the primary objective to study sound propagation within underwater waveguides for which the seabed consists of fine-grained, muddy sediments. In this study, a Bayesian framework is applied to underwater noise recorded by IVAR from a cargo ship traversing the central region of the SBCEX2017 area for the purpose of inversion to characterize sediment properties. The vector acoustic data are in the form of a bounded, nondimensional form known as circularity, a quantity that is independent of the ship noise-source spectrum and that can be interpreted as the normalized curl of active intensity. The inversion model space for the seabed consists of a low-compressional speed layer and underlying basement half-space, with each having compressional and shear components. The interpretative model for producing a replica of the data is based on the plane wave reflection coefficient for a layered, elastic seabed in conjunction with the depth-dependent Green’s function that is integrated in the complex wave number plane to obtain pressure and particle velocity fields. The small change in water depth between the location of the ship source and IVAR is addressed using adiabatic mode theory. The inversion results exhibit slow variation over the 20-min observation period, representing approximately 5 km of travel by the ship source. |
Trends in low-frequency underwater noise off the Oregon coast and impacts of COVID-19 pandemic Dahl, P.H., D.R. Dall'Osto, and M.J. Harrington, "Trends in low-frequency underwater noise off the Oregon coast and impacts of COVID-19 pandemic," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 149, 4073-4077, doi:10.1121/10.0005192, 2021. |
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1 Jun 2021 |
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Approximately six years of underwater noise data recorded from the Regional Cabled Array network are examined to study long-term trends. The data originate from station HYS14 located 87 km offshore of Newport, OR. The results indicate that the third-octave band level centered at 63 Hz and attributable to shipping activity is reduced in the spring of 2020 by about 1.6 dB relative to the mean of the prior five years, owing to the reduced economic activity initiated by the COVID-19 pandemic. The results are subtle, as the noise reduction is less than the typical seasonal fluctuation associated with warming ocean surface temperatures in the summer that reduces mode excitation support at typical ship source depths, causing a repeated annual level change on the order of 4 dB at shipping frequencies. Seasonality of the noise contribution near 20 Hz from fin whales is also discussed. Corroboration of a COVID-19 effect on shipping noise is offered by an analysis of automatic identification system shipping data and shipping container activity for Puget Sound, over the same six-year period, which shows a reduction in the second quarter of 2020 by ~19% and ~17%, respectively, relative to the mean of the prior five years. |
The deployment of the Seismometer to Investigate Ice and Ocean Structure (SIIOS) in Northwest Greenland: An analog experiment for icy ocean world seismic deployments Marusiak, A.G., and 12 others including P.H. Dahl, "The deployment of the Seismometer to Investigate Ice and Ocean Structure (SIIOS) in Northwest Greenland: An analog experiment for icy ocean world seismic deployments," Seismol. Res. Lett., 92, 2036-2049, doi:10.1785/0220200291, 2021. |
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17 Mar 2021 |
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In anticipation of future spacecraft missions to icy ocean worlds, the Seismometer to Investigate Ice and Ocean Structure (SIIOS) was funded by National Aeronautics and Space Administration, to prepare for seismologic investigations of these worlds. During the summer of 2018, the SIIOS team deployed a seismic experiment on the Greenland ice sheet situated, approximately, 80 km north of Qaanaaq, Greenland. The seismometers deployed included one Trillium 120 s Posthole (TPH) broadband seismometer, 13 Silicon Audio flight‐candidate seismometers, and five Sercel L28 4.5 Hz geophones. Seismometers were buried 1 m deep in the firn in a cross‐shaped array centered on a collocated TPH and Silicon Audio instrument. One part of the array consisted of Silicon Audio and Sercel geophones situated 1 m from the center of the array in the ordinal directions. A second set of four Silicon Audio instruments was situated 1 km from the center of the array in the cardinal directions. A mock‐lander spacecraft was placed at the array center and instrumented with four Silicon Audio seismometers. We performed an active‐source experiment and a passive‐listening experiment that lasted for, approximately, 12 days. The active–source experiment consisted of 912 sledgehammer strikes to an aluminum plate at 10 separate locations up to 100 m from the array center. The passive experiment recorded the ice‐sheet ambient background noise, as well as local and regional events. Both datasets will be used to quantify differences in spacecraft instrumentation deployment strategies, and for evaluating science capabilities for single‐station and small‐aperture seismic arrays in future geophysical missions. Our initial results indicate that the flight‐candidate seismometer performs comparably to the TPH at frequencies above 0.1 Hz and that instruments coupled to the mock‐lander perform comparably to ground‐based instrumentation in the frequency band of 0.110 Hz. For future icy ocean world missions, a deck‐coupled seismometer would perform similarly to a ground‐based deployment across the most frequency bands. |
Physical effects of sound exposure from underwater explosions on Pacific sardines (Sardinops sagax) Dahl, P.H., A.K. Jenkins, B. Casper, S.E. Kotecki, V. Bowman, C. Boerger, D.R. Dall'Osto, M.A. Babina, and A.N. Popper, "Physical effects of sound exposure from underwater explosions on Pacific sardines (Sardinops sagax)," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 147, 2383-2395, doi:10.1121/10.0001064, 2020. |
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20 Apr 2020 |
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Explosions from activities such as construction, demolition, and military activities are increasingly encountered in the underwater soundscape. However, there are few scientifically rigorous data on the effects of underwater explosions on aquatic animals, including fishes. Thus, there is a need for data on potential effects on fishes collected simultaneously with data on the received signal characteristics that result in those effects. To better understand potential physical effects on fishes, Pacific sardines (Sardinops sagax) were placed in cages at mid-depth at distances of 18 to 246 m from a single mid-depth detonation of C4 explosive (4.66 kg net explosive weight). The experimental site was located in the coastal ocean with a consistent depth of approximately 19.5 m. Following exposure, potential correlations between blast acoustics and observed physical effects were examined. Acoustic metrics were calculated as a function of range, including peak pressure, sound exposure level, and integrated pressure over time. Primary effects related to exposure were damage to the swim bladder and kidney. Interestingly, the relative frequency of these two injuries displayed a non-monotonic dependence with range from the explosion in relatively shallow water. A plausible explanation connecting swim bladder expansion with negative pressure as influenced by bottom reflection is proposed. |
Estimation of seabed properties and range from vector acoustic observations of underwater ship noise Dahl, P.H., and D.R. Dall'Osto, "Estimation of seabed properties and range from vector acoustic observations of underwater ship noise," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 147, EL345, doi:10.1121/10.0001089, 2020. |
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17 Apr 2020 |
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The Intensity Vector Autonomous Recorder (IVAR) simultaneously measures acoustic particle velocity and pressure. IVAR was deployed during the 2017 Seabed Characterization Experiment (SBCEX) with the primary objective to study sound propagation in fine-grained, muddy sediments. In this study a Bayesian inversion framework is applied to ship underwater noise recorded by IVAR. The data are relative phase of pressure and vertical particle velocity, a quantity that is independent of the ship noise source spectrum. Inversion estimates for the sediment layer and underlying basement properties are in agreement with other reports from SBCEX. |
The deployment of the seismometer to investigate ice and ocean structure (SIIOS) on Gulkana Glacier, Alaska Marusiak, A.G., and 10 other including P.H. Dahl, "The deployment of the seismometer to investigate ice and ocean structure (SIIOS) on Gulkana Glacier, Alaska," Seismol. Res. Lett., 91, 1901-1914, doi:10.1785/0220190328, 2020. |
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18 Mar 2020 |
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The Seismometer to Investigate Ice and Ocean Structure (SIIOS) is a NASA‐funded analog mission program to test flight‐candidate instrumentation on icy‐ocean world analog sites. In September 2017, an SIIOS experiment was deployed on Gulkana Glacier. The instrumentation included a Nanometrics Trillium 120 s Posthole seismometer, four Nanometrics Trillium Compact (TC) seismometers, four Mark Products L28 geophones, and five each of Silicon Audio (SiA) 203P‐15 and 203P‐60 seismometers. The SiA sensors served as our flight‐candidate instruments. The instrumentation was arranged in a small (< 2 m) aperture array with most sensors deployed in the ice. We also placed five of the SiA seismometers on top of a mock lander to simulate placement on a lander deck. The instrumentation recorded an active‐source experiment immediately after deployment and then passively for 13 days. We conducted an active‐source experiment using a sledgehammer striking an aluminum plate at 13 locations, with 913 shots occurring at each location. During the passive observation, the experiment recorded one large Mw 7.1 event that occurred in Mexico and four other teleseismic events with Mw > 6.0. The active‐ and passive‐source signals are being used to constrain the local glacial hydrological structure, environmental seismicity, to develop algorithms to detect and locate seismic sources, and to quantify the similarities and differences in science capabilities between sensors. Initial results indicate the flight‐candidate instrumentation performs comparably to the Trillium Posthole up to periods of 3 s, after which the flight‐candidate performs more comparably to the TCs. |
Short-range signatures of explosive sounds in shallow water used for seabed characterization Wilson, P.S., D.P. Knowles, P.H. Dahl, A.R. McNeese, and M.C. Zeh, "Short-range signatures of explosive sounds in shallow water used for seabed characterization," IEEE J. Ocean. Eng., 45, 14-25, doi:10.1109/JOE.2019.2934372, 2020. |
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1 Jan 2020 |
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Small explosions were used as sound sources in the Seabed Characterization Experiment conducted in spring 2017 in the New England Mud Patch, a shallow-water region with a depth of approximately 75 m. The sources were U.S. Navy Signal Underwater Sound (SUS) Mk 64 charges, which contained 31.18 g of the explosive 2,4,6-Trinitrophenylmethylnitramine, commonly referred to as Tetryl. Source recordings were obtained by two hydrophones deployed from the same ship that deployed the SUS. The recordings were analyzed for bubble period, energy spectral density, and the variability of these parameters, and compared to previous results from the literature, including the prediction of a historic spectral model, and a new semiempirical time-domain model assembled using measured data from the literature. The new model describes the source level measurements in the 25275-Hz band and in the 400-Hz octave band to within 0.5 dB, and agrees with similar measurements from the literature to within 0.6 dB. The standard deviation of the band-limited source levels was found to be about 1 dB, some of which is ascribed to uncertainty and variation in the source-to-receiver distance. The observed source level variation is similar to previously reported values. |
Vector acoustic analysis of time-separated modal arrivals from explosive sound sources during the 2017 Seabed Characterization Experiment Dahl, P.H., and D.R. Dall'Osto, "Vector acoustic analysis of time-separated modal arrivals from explosive sound sources during the 2017 Seabed Characterization Experiment," IEEE J. Ocean. Eng., 45, 131-143, doi:10.1109/JOE.2019.2902500, 2020. |
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1 Jan 2020 |
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The Intensity Vector Autonomous Recorder (IVAR) is a system that records four coherent channels of acoustic data continuously: one channel for acoustic pressure and three channels associated with a triaxial accelerometer from which acoustic particle velocity is obtained. IVAR recorded the vector acoustic field in broadband signals originating from Signal, Underwater Sound (SUS) (Mk-64) charges deployed at 513-km range from the fixed IVAR site (mean depth 74.4 m) as part of the 2017 Seabed Characterization Experiment (SBCEX) designed to study the acoustics of fine-grained muddy sediments. Sufficient geometric dispersion at these ranges permitted unambiguous identification of up to four modes as a function of frequency for frequencies less than 80 Hz. From time–frequency analysis of the dispersed arrivals, a single mode (n) and single-frequency (fi) properties are identified at peaks in the narrowband scalar field, with time dependence corresponding to mode group speed. At these time–frequency addresses, four quantities derived from the vector acoustic measurements are formed by coherent combination of pressure and velocity channels: first, modal phase speed; second, circularity, a measure of the normalized curl of active intensity; third, depth-dependent mode speed of energy; and fourth, vertical component of reactive intensity normalized by scalar intensity. A means to compute these quantities theoretically is provided, and a comparison of model results based on a notional geoacoustic representation for the SBCEX experimental area consisting of a single low-speed mud layer over a half-space area versus a Pekeris representation based on the same half-space shows a striking difference, with the field observations also clearly at variance with the Pekeris representation. A fundamental property of mode 2, observed at the IVAR location, is a change in sign for circularity and vertical reactive intensity near 37 Hz that is posited as a constraint observation for mode 2 that must be exhibited by any geoacoustic model that includes a low-speed mudlike layer applied to this location. |
Observations of water column and bathymetric effects on the incident acoustic field associated with shallow-water reverberation experiments Dall'Osto, D.R., and P.H. Dahl, "Observations of water column and bathymetric effects on the incident acoustic field associated with shallow-water reverberation experiments," IEEE J. Ocean. Eng., 42, 1146-1161, doi:10.1109/JOE.2017.2717661, 2017. |
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1 Oct 2017 |
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As a part of the 2013 Targets and Reverberation Experiment (TREX13), measurements of the acoustic field generated by a source used in midfrequency (1.83.6 kHz) reverberation experiments are studied at 5 and 6 km range. The TREX13 reverberation sources were placed off the coast of Panama City, FL, USA, in waters ~20 m deep, and data discussed here are from a 2-h period in the late afternoon on April 28, 2013. The observed coda of the source signal is partitioned into an initial primary arrival, and a distinct second arrival delayed by roughly 2 s. Characteristics of the two arrivals are studied in terms of the effective number of modes, interference features, and the direction of acoustic intensity, which was directly measured by a vector sensor located at 5 km range. A shift in frequency within the primary arrival is observed over the 2-h measurement period. Frequency shifts are related to a change in range of dislocations, defined as points of complete destructive interference in the acoustic field, that modulate with tidal variation in the sound-speed profile. Precise frequencies are identified with the vector property called circularity, a nondimensional measure of acoustic intensity curl, that is maximal within the vortex-like intensity field within a dislocation. Using the waveguide invariant β, the frequency shift is used to estimate the tidal change in the thermocline depth. These interference features are absent in the second arrival, which is postulated to be an acoustic path horizontally refracted by the gently sloping bathymetry (~0.4°) forming the coastal environment. A description of the refraction using modal rays is developed, and the transition of the mode from being trapped to leaky is handled as a transition to a virtual mode near the cutoff depth. Models of the primary and refracted arrivals are presented to support the conclusions. |
On the underwater sound field from impact pile driving: Arrival structure, precursor arrivals, and energy streamlines Dahl, P.H., and D.R. Dall'Osto, "On the underwater sound field from impact pile driving: Arrival structure, precursor arrivals, and energy streamlines," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 142, 1141, doi:10.1121/1.4999060, 2017. |
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1 Aug 2017 |
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Underwater noise from impact pile driving is studied through measurements using a vertical line array (VLA) placed at range 120 m from the pile source (water depth 7.5 m) over which bathymetry varied gradually increasing to depth 12.5 m at the VLA. The data were modeled assuming the pile impact produces a radial expansion that acts as sound source and propagates along the pile at supersonic speed. This leads to the conceptualization of the pile as a discrete, vertical line source for which frequency- and source-depth-dependent complex phasing is applied. Dominant features of the pressure time series versus measurement depth are reproduced in modeled counterparts that are linearly related. These observations include precursor arrivals for which arrival timing depends on hydrophone depth and influence of a sediment sound speed gradient on precursor amplitude. Spatial gradients of model results are taken to obtain estimates of acoustic particle velocity and vector intensity for which active intensity is studied in the time domain. Evaluation of energy streamlines based on time-integrated active intensity, and energy path lines based on instantaneous (or very-short-time integrated) active intensity reveal interesting structure in the acoustic field, including an inference as to the source depth of the precursor. |
Observations of sea-surface waves during the 2013 Target and Reverberation Experiment (TREX13) and relation to midfrequency sonar Dahl, P.H., and D.R. Dall'Osto, "Observations of sea-surface waves during the 2013 Target and Reverberation Experiment (TREX13) and relation to midfrequency sonar," IEEE J. Ocean. Eng., 42, 250-259, doi:10.1109/JOE.2016.2597718, 2017. |
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1 Apr 2017 |
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As part of the 2013 Target and REverberation eXperiment (TREX13), which took place off the coast of Panama City, FL, USA, directional wave measurements were made using two directional wave buoys separated in range by 5 km. The purpose of these measurements was to provide environmental support for the interpretation of reverberation and other active sonar experiments that were part of TREX13. During the measurement period between April 22 and May 17, 2013 exclusive of a period of nondeployment May 26, 2013, the root-mean-square (rms) wave height H varied over the range 0.030.33 m, holding a median value of 0.11 m; the wind speed varied from ~1 to 10 m/s with a median value of 4.7 m/s, and the rms wave slope averaged over all directions varied from 0.01 to 0.10 with median value of 0.05. These parameters are placed in the context of midfrequency sonar propagation and reverberation prediction. One buoy operated the entire period, with the second buoy operating simultaneously over a four-day overlap period, during which there was excellent agreement between H and wave slope in two orthogonal directions, a finding relevant to describing the sea surface as spatially invariant, or homogeneous, for purposes of sonar modeling. The analysis of energy-weighted mean direction illustrates how the wave field was generally composed of a mixture of swell and wind-generated waves; in cases of purely wind-generated waves the effect of a limited fetch was also shown. |
Measurement of acoustic particle motion in shallow water and its application to geoacoustic inversion Dall'Osto, D.R., C.W. Choi, and P.H. Dahl, "Measurement of acoustic particle motion in shallow water and its application to geoacoustic inversion," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 139, 311-319, doi:/10.1121/1.4939492, 2016 |
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15 Jan 2016 |
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Within an underwater acoustic waveguide, the interference among multipath arrivals causes a phase difference in orthogonal components of the particle velocity. When two components of the particle velocity are not in phase, the fluid particles follow an elliptical trajectory. This property of the acoustic field can be readily detected by a vector sensor. A non-dimensional vector quantity, the degree of circularity, is used to quantify how much the trajectory resembles a circle. In this paper, vector sensormeasurements collected during the 2013 Target and Reverberation Experiment are used to demonstrate the effect of multipath interference on the degree of circularity. Finally, geoacoustic properties representing the sandy sediment at the experimental site are inverted by minimization of a cost function, which quantifies the deviation between the measured and modeled degree of circularity. |
Modeling explosion generated Scholte waves in sandy sediments with power law dependent shear wave speed Soloway, A.G., P.H. Dahl, and R.I. Odom, "Modeling explosion generated Scholte waves in sandy sediments with power law dependent shear wave speed," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 138, EL370-374, doi:10.1121/1.4931831, 2015 |
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9 Oct 2015 |
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Experimental measurements of Scholte waves from underwater explosions collected off the coast of Virginia Beach, VA in shallow water are presented. It is shown here that the dispersion of these explosion-generated Scholte waves traveling in the sandy seabed can be modeled using a power-law dependent shear wave speed profile and an empirical source model that determines the pressure time-series at 1%u2009m from the source as a function of TNT-equivalent charge weight. |
The underwater sound field from vibratory pile driving Dahl, P.H., D.R. Dall'Osto, and D.M. Farrell, "The underwater sound field from vibratory pile driving," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 137, 3544-3554, doi:10.1121/1.4921288, 2015. |
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1 Jun 2015 |
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Underwater noise from vibratory pile driving was observed using a vertical line array placed at range 16 m from the pile source (water depth 7.5 m), and using single hydrophones at range 417 m on one transect, and range 207 and 436 m on another transect running approximately parallel to a sloping shoreline. The dominant spectral features of the underwater noise are related to the frequency of the vibratory pile driving hammer (typically 1535 Hz), producing spectral lines at intervals of this frequency. The mean-square pressure versus depth is subsequently studied in third-octave bands. Depth and frequency variations of this quantity observed at the vertical line array are well modeled by a field consisting of an incoherent sum of sources distributed over the water column. Adiabatic mode theory is used to propagate this field to greater ranges and model the observations made along the two depth-varying transects. The effect of shear in the seabed, although small, is also included. Bathymetric refraction on the transect parallel to the shoreline reduced mean-square pressure levels at the 436-m measurement site. |
The underwater sound field from impact pile driving and its potential effects on marine life Dahl, P.H., C.A.F. de Jong, and A.N. Popper, "The underwater sound field from impact pile driving and its potential effects on marine life," Acoust. Today, 11, 18-25, 2015. |
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1 Jun 2015 |
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Impact pile driving is a method used to install piles for marine and inland water construction projects using high-energy impact hammers. The installation of hollow steel piles in this manner can produce extremely high sound levels in the surrounding waters (as well as in the air). Given the large-scale development of offshore wind in European waters and plans for such development in US waters, along with an increasing need for upgrades in the in-water infrastructure, there is a growing concern about the potential effect of construction-related underwater sounds on marine mammal and fish populations. |
Six decades of evolution in underwater acoustics at the Applied Physics Laboratory, University of Washington Williams, K.L. D. Tang, P.H. Dahl, E.I. Thorns, D.R. Jackson, and T.E. Ewart, "Six decades of evolution in underwater acoustics at the Applied Physics Laboratory, University of Washington," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 137, 2331, doi:10.1121/1.4920514, 2015 |
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1 Apr 2015 |
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Professor Joe Henderson of the University of Washington physics department formed the Applied Physics Laboratory during WWII. The lab’s initial efforts were to redesign the magnetic influence exploders used in US torpedoes. One of the lab’s first Underwater Acoustics (UA) successes was development of transducers used in the Bikini Atoll Able test (1946). Those transducers, used to trigger other instrumentation, proved critical. Combining UA and torpedo expertise brought APL-UW to the forefront of tracking range design, construction and deployment in Dabob Bay, Nanoose, and St. Croix in the 1950s and 1960. Understanding the torpedo behavior seen in tracking ranges required measuring both the ocean environment and the acoustics within that environment. Making those measurements, as well as development and testing of models based on those measurements, also became standard operating procedure at APL, led in the 50’s by Murphy and Potter. This blueprint of applied research motivating basic research, and the pursuit of basic research via ocean experiments and high fidelity modeling, continues to this day. The presentation will follow this evolution. APL-UW ocean experiments carried out during that time, as well as notable APL-UW research papers, technical reports, computer codes and textbooks, will be used as guideposts. |
Peak sound pressure and sound exposure level from underwater explosions in shallow water Soloway, A.G., and P.H. Dahl, "Peak sound pressure and sound exposure level from underwater explosions in shallow water," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 136, EL218, doi:10.1121/1.4892668, 2014. |
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1 Sep 2014 |
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Experimental measurements of the peak pressure and sound exposure level (SEL) from underwater explosions collected 79km off the coast of Virginia Beach, Virginia are presented. The peak pressures are compared to results from previous studies and a semi-empirical equation that is a function of measurement range and charge weight, and are found to be in good agreement. An empirical equation for SEL that similarly employs a scaling approach involving charge weight and range is also presented and shows promise for the prediction of SEL in shallow water. |
Flow-noise and turbulence in two tidal channels Bassett, C., J. Thomson, P. H. Dahl, and B. Polagye, "Flow-noise and turbulence in two tidal channels," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 135(4), 1764-1774, doi:10.1121/1.4867360, 2014. |
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13 May 2014 |
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Flow-noise resulting from oceanic turbulence and interactions with pressure-sensitive transducers can interfere with ambient noise measurements. This noise source is particularly important in low-frequency measurements (f < 100 Hz) and in highly turbulent environments such as tidal channels. This work presents measurements made in the Chacao Channel, Chile, and in Admiralty Inlet, Puget Sound, WA. In both environments, peak currents exceed 3 m/s and pressure spectral densities attributed to flow-noise are observed at frequencies up to 500 Hz. At 20 Hz, flow-noise exceeds mean slack noise levels by more than 50 dB. Two semi-empirical flow-noise models are developed and applied to predict flow-noise at frequencies from 20 to 500 Hz using measurements of current velocity and turbulence. The first model directly applies mean velocity and turbulence spectra while the second model relies on scaling arguments that relate turbulent dissipation to the mean velocity. Both models, based on prior formulations for infrasonic (f < 20 Hz) flow-noise, agree well with observations in Chacao Channel. In Admiralty Inlet, good agreement is shown only with the model that applies mean velocity and turbulence spectra, as the measured turbulence violates the scaling assumption in the second model. |
Vertical coherence and forward scattering from the sea surface and the relation to the directional wave spectrum Dahl, P.H., W.J. Plant, and D.R. Dall'Osto, "Vertical coherence and forward scattering from the sea surface and the relation to the directional wave spectrum," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 134, 1843-1853, doi:10.1121/1.4817846, 2013. |
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1 Sep 2013 |
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Results of an experiment to measure vertical spatial coherence from acoustic paths interacting once with the sea surface but at perpendicular azimuth angles are presented. The measurements were part of the Shallow Water 2006 program that took place off the coast of New Jersey in August 2006. An acoustic source, frequency range 620 kHz, was deployed at depth 40 m, and signals were recorded on a 1.4-m long vertical line array centered at depth 25 m and positioned at range 200 m. The vertical array consisted of four omni-directional hydrophones and vertical coherences were computed between pairs of these hydrophones. Measurements were made over four sourcereceiver bearing angles separated by 90°, during which sea surface conditions remained stable and characterized by a root-mean-square wave height of 0.17 m and a mixture of swell and wind waves. Vertical coherences show a statistically significant difference depending on sourcereceiver bearing when the acoustic frequency is less than about 12 kHz, with results tending to fade at higher frequencies. This paper presents field observations and comparisons of these observations with two modeling approaches, one based on bistatic forward scattering and the other on a rough surface parabolic wave equation utilizing synthetic sea surfaces. |
Elliptical acoustic particle motion in underwater waveguides Dall'Osto, D., and P.H. Dahl, "Elliptical acoustic particle motion in underwater waveguides," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 134, 109-118, doi:10.1121/1.4807747, 2013. |
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1 Jul 2013 |
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Elliptical particle motion, often encountered in acoustic fields containing interference between a source signal and its reflections, can be quantified by the degree of circularity, a vector quantity formulated from acoustic particle velocity, or vector intensity measurements. Acoustic analysis based on the degree of circularity is expected to find application in ocean waveguides as its spatial dependence relates to the acquisition geometry, water column sound speed, surface conditions, and bottom properties. Vector sensor measurements from a laboratory experiment are presented to demonstrate the depth dependence of both the degree of circularity and an approximate formulation based on vertical intensity measurements. The approximation is applied to vertical intensity field measurements made in a 2006 experiment off the New Jersey coast (in waters 80 m deep) to demonstrate the effect of sediment structure on the range dependence of the degree of circularity. The mathematical formulation presented here establishes the framework to readily compute the degree of circularity from experimental measurements; the experimental examples are provided as evidence of the spatial and frequency dependence of this fundamental vector property. |
Beam forming of the underwater sound field from impact pile driving Dahl, P.H., and P.G. Reinhall, "Beam forming of the underwater sound field from impact pile driving," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 134, EL1-EL6, doi:10.1121/1.4807430, 2013. |
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5 Jun 2013 |
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Observations of underwater noise from impact pile driving were made with a vertical line array. Previous studies [Reinhall and Dahl, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 130, 12091216 (2011)] show that the dominant underwater noise from impact driving is from the Mach wave associated with the radial expansion of the pile that propagates down the pile at supersonic speed after impact. Here precise estimates of the vertical arrival angles associated with the down- and up-going Mach wave are made via beam forming, and the energy budget of the arrival structure is quantified. |
Underwater radiated noise measurements of a noise-reduced fisheries research vessel De Robertis, A., C.D. Wilson, S.R. Furnish, and P.H. Dahl, "Underwater radiated noise measurements of a noise-reduced fisheries research vessel," ICES J. Mar. Sci., 70, 480-484, doi:10.1093/icesjms/fss172, 2013. |
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1 Mar 2013 |
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Vessel-radiated noise is traditionally measured at naval acoustic ranges, but lower-cost options are desirable for routine monitoring of research vessels. Measurements of a noise-reduced research vessel made at a naval noise range are compared to those made using an experimental mooring equipped with commercially available instrumentation. The measurements from the mooring were precise and within 2.5 dB of those from the noise range at third-octave bands <500 Hz. At higher frequencies, direct comparisons were precluded by an intermittent shaft-related noise present only during the mooring measurements, but previously observed at the navy range. The agreement between the two methods suggests that simplified, field-deployable hydrophone systems can be used to accurately characterize the noise signatures of research vessels. |
Attenuation of pile driving noise using a double walled sound shield Reinhall, P.G., and P.H. Dahl, "Attenuation of pile driving noise using a double walled sound shield," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 132, 2034, doi:10.1121/1.4755475, 2012. |
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1 Sep 2012 |
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Pile driving in water produces high sound levels in underwater environments. The associated pressures are known to produce deleterious effects on both fish and marine mammals. We present an evaluation of the effectiveness of surrounding the pile with a double walled sound shield to decrease impact pile driving noise. Four 32 m long, 76 cm diameter piles were driven 14 m into the sediment with a vibratory hammer. A double walled sound shield was then installed around the pile, and the pile was impact driven another 3 m while sound measurements were obtained. The last 0.3 m was driven with the sound shield removed, and data were collected for the untreated pile. The sound field obtained by finite element analysis is shown to agree well with measure data. The effectiveness of the sound shield is found to be limited by the fact that an upward moving Mach wave is produced in the sediment after the first reflection of the deformation wave against the bottom end of the pile. The sound reduction obtained through the use of the sound shield, as measured 10 meters away from the pile, is shown to be approximately 12dB dB re 1 µPa. |
Modeling and visualization of the underwater sound field associated with underwater pile driving Farrell, D.M., and P.H. Dahl, "Modeling and visualization of the underwater sound field associated with underwater pile driving," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 132, 2061, doi:10.1121/1.4755595, 2012. |
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1 Sep 2012 |
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As communities seek to expand and upgrade marine and transportation infrastructure, underwater noise from pile driving associated with marine construction is a significant environmental regulatory challenge. This work explores results of different transmission loss models for a site in Puget Sound and the effect of improved understanding of modeling on the extents of zones of influence. It has been observed that most of the energy associated with impact pile driving is less than about 1000 Hz. Here, analysis of the spectral content of pile driving noise is undertaken to ascertain the optimal surrogate frequency to model the broadband nature of the noise. Included is a comparison of a normal mode model, which is motivated by work presented by Reinhall and Dahl [JASA 130, 1209 (2011)], with other methods. A GIS (Geographic Information System) tool, ArcMap, is used to map the sound level over the bathymetry, which has proved to be a useful way of visualizing the impact of the noise. |
On the Mach wave effect in impact pile driving, its observation, and its influence on tramsmission loss Dahl, P.H., and P.G. Reinhall, "On the Mach wave effect in impact pile driving, its observation, and its influence on tramsmission loss," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 132, 2033, doi:10.1121/1.4755474, 2012. |
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1 Sep 2012 |
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Pile driving in water produces extremely high sound pressure levels in the surrounding underwater environment of order 10 kPa at ranges of order 10 m from the pile that can result in deleterious effects on both fish and marine mammals. In Reinhall and Dahl [J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 130, 1209-1216, Sep. 2011] it is shown that the dominant underwater noise from impact driving is from the Mach wave associated with the radial expansion of the pile that propagates down the pile at speeds in excess of Mach 3 with respect to the underwater sound speed. In this talk we focus on observations of the Mach wave effect made with a 5.6 m-length vertical line array, at ranges 8-15 m in waters of depth ~12.5 m. The key observation is the dominant vertical arrival angle associated with the Mach wave, ~17 deg., but other observations include: its frequency dependence, the ratio of purely waterborne energy compared with that which emerges from the sediment, and results of a mode filtering operation which also points to the same dominant angle. Finally, these observations suggest a model for transmission loss which will also be discussed. |
The effect of bottom layering on the acoustic vector field Dall'Osto, D.R., and P.H. Dahl, "The effect of bottom layering on the acoustic vector field," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 132, 2092, doi:10.1121/1.4755735, 2012. |
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1 Sep 2012 |
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A signal reflected from a layered sea-bed contains information pertaining to the sediment properties. Typically, a signal intended to probe the sea-bed is designed to have a large bandwidth to allow for time separation of arrivals from the multiple layers. Depending on the geometry, it may impossible to avoid interference of these arrivals. The interference of these multiple arrivals does establish a pattern observable in the vector intensity. Measurements of the vertical complex acoustic intensity of a near-bottom source (~λ from the seafloor) collected off the coast of New Jersey in 2006 demonstrate the effect of a sub-bottom layer and the observable interference pattern between the first bottom reflection and the sub-bottom reflection. The spatial structure of the complex intensity can be used to infer bottom properties, which are in close agreement with a number of experimental studies at this location. The observable in the complex intensity can also be directly measured with a particle motion sensor. Parabolic equation simulations of the experimental site are used to demonstrate both the characteristic of the vector field and the sensitivity of these vector properties to changes in the sediment properties. |
Underwater vector intensity measurements in the ocean and laboratory Dall'Osto, D.R., and P.H. Dahl, "Underwater vector intensity measurements in the ocean and laboratory," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 132, 1985, doi:10.1121/1.4755327, 2012. |
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1 Sep 2012 |
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Underwater measurements of the acoustic intensity vector field can be provided by either spatially separated hydrophones or by a sensor measuring a property of particle motion, such as particle acceleration. These measurements are used to formulate the vector intensity as the product of pressure and particle velocity. The magnitude of the vector intensity is not necessarily equal to the plane-wave intensity (the mean square pressure divided by the density and sound-speed of the medium) which is often used to define pressure measurements in terms of intensity. In regions of strong destructive interference, the magnitude of the vector intensity may be greater than the plane-wave intensity. Measurements of an impulsive source on a vertical line array of pressure sensors spanning a shallow sea (60 m) off the coast of South Korea are presented to demonstrate properties of the complex intensity vector field in an ocean waveguide. Here, the vertical complex intensity is formulated by finite-difference methods. These vertical intensity observations in the ocean waveguide have implications on properties of the complete vector field. A laboratory experiment using a tri-axial particle acceleration sensor is presented to provide a connection between measurement of elliptical particle motion and complex intensity. |
Attenuation of noise from pile driving in water using an acoustic shield Reinhall, P., and P. Dahl, "Attenuation of noise from pile driving in water using an acoustic shield," Proceedings, 11th European Conference on Underwater Acoustics, 2-6 July, Edinburgh, 368-375 (Institute of Acoustics, 2012). |
2 Jul 2012 |
Observations of underwater sound from impact pile driving using a vertical line array Dahl, P., and P. Reinhall, "Observations of underwater sound from impact pile driving using a vertical line array," Proceedings, 11th European Conference on Underwater Acoustics, 2-6 July, Edinburgh, 1340-1347 (Institute of Acoustics, 2012). |
2 Jul 2012 |
Transmission loss and range, depth scales associated with impact pile driving Dahl, P., P. Reinhall, and D. Farrell, "Transmission loss and range, depth scales associated with impact pile driving," Proceedings, 11th European Conference on Underwater Acoustics, 2-6 July, Edinburgh, 1860-1867 (Institute of Acoustics, 2012). |
2 Jul 2012 |
Waveguide properties of active intensity vorticity Dall'Osto, D., and P. Dahl, "Waveguide properties of active intensity vorticity," Proceedings, 11th European Conference on Underwater Acoustics, 2-6 July, Edinburgh, 1939-1947 (Institute of Acoustics, 2012). |
2 Jul 2012 |
Scattering measurements from a dissolving bubble Kapodistrias, G., and P.H. Dahl, "Scattering measurements from a dissolving bubble," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 131, 4243-4251, doi:10.1121/1.3703060, 2012. |
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1 Jun 2012 |
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A laboratory-scale study on acoustic scattering from a single bubble undergoing dissolution in undersaturated fresh water is presented. Several experiments are performed with the acoustic source driven with five-cycle tone bursts, center frequency of 120 kHz, to insonify a single bubble located on axis of the combined beam of the set of transducers. The bubble is placed on a fine nylon thread located in the far field of the transducer set, arranged in bistatic configuration, in a tank filled with undersaturated water. Backscattered waveforms from the bubble target are acquired every few seconds for several hours until the bubble has completely dissolved, and detailed dissolution curves are produced from the acoustic data. The rate of bubble dissolution is calculated using the solution developed by Epstein and Plesset [J. Chem. Phys. 18, 1505-1509 (1950)]. The results of the experiments performed are in agreement with the calculations. |
Properties of the acoustic intensity vector field in a shallow water waveguide Dall'Osto, D.R., P.H. Dahl, and J.W. Choi, "Properties of the acoustic intensity vector field in a shallow water waveguide," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 131, 2023-2035, doi:10.1121/1.3682063, 2012. |
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1 Mar 2012 |
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Acoustic intensity is a vector quantity described by collocated measurements of acoustic pressure and particle velocity. In an ocean waveguide, the interaction among multipath arrivals of propagating wavefronts manifests unique behavior in the acoustic intensity. The instantaneous intensity, or energy flux, contains two components: a propagating and non-propagating energy flux. The instantaneous intensity is described by the time-dependent complex intensity, where the propagating and non-propagating energy fluxes are modulated by the active and reactive intensity envelopes, respectively. |
Underwater Mach wave radiation from impact pile driving: Theory and observation Reinhall, P.G., and P.H. Dahl, "Underwater Mach wave radiation from impact pile driving: Theory and observation," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 130, 1209-1216, doi:10.1121/1.3614540, 2011 |
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1 Sep 2011 |
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The underwater noise from impact pile driving is studied using a finite element model for the sound generation and parabolic equation model for propagation. Results are compared with measurements using a vertical line array deployed at a marine construction site in Puget Sound. It is shown that the dominant underwater noise from impact driving is from the Mach wave associated with the radial expansion of the pile that propagates down the pile after impact at supersonic speed. The predictions of vertical arrival angle associated with the Mach cone, peak pressure level as function of depth, and dominant features of the pressure timeseries compare well with corresponding field observations. |
Acoustic radiation during marine pile driving Reinhall, P.G. and P.H. Dahl, "Acoustic radiation during marine pile driving," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 129, 2460, doi:10.1121/1.3588091, 2011. |
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1 Apr 2011 |
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Pile driving in water produces extremely high sound levels in the surrounding under water environment. Sound levels as high as 220 dB re 1 micro Pa are not uncommon 10 m away from a steel pile as it is driven into the sediment with an impact hammer. The primary source of underwater sound originating from pile driving is associated with compression of the pile. The pile is struck and the Poisson effect produces a radial displacement motion in the pile that will propagate downward at a computed speed comparable to but less than the longitudinal wave speed in steel. It is shown, using both finite element analysis and modeling based on the parabolic wave equation, that this radial motion of the pile is responsible for the ensuing high underwater sound pressures. It is also shown that the radial motion of the pile is transmitted into the water, either directly from the pile or indirectly via the bottom sediment that is in contact with the pile. A dominant feature of the resulting sound field is an axisymmetric Mach cone with apex traveling along with the pile deformation wave front. |
Acoustic transmission loss in industrial pile driving Stockham, M.L., P.H. Dahl, and P.G. Reinhall, "Acoustic transmission loss in industrial pile driving," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 129, 2461, doi:10.1121/1.3588094, 2011. |
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1 Apr 2011 |
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Industrial pile driving is a source of high-level underwater noise and new understanding of its effects on the behavior and health of marine mammals and fish has motivated numerous regulations intended to limit these effects. Of primary importance is to identify a suitable transmission loss model to predict where, given a certain source level, the noise produced by the pile driving reaches regulatory thresholds. In November 2009, data were collected from a marine construction site in the Puget Sound. Measurements at two ranges (8 and 12 m) from the pile being driven were taken using a nine hydrophone vertical line array (VLA). Concurrently, at a range of approximately 120 m, there was also a single hydrophone at a depth of 5 m (sensitive to frequencies greater than 10 kHz). By comparing the levels at the VLA to the more distant hydrophone across a number of pile strikes (each forming a identifiable short- and far-range pair), the transmission loss can be estimated. These results are in turn modeled using an approach based on the parabolic wave equation. |
Airborne noise contributions to the underwater noise sound field Dall'Osto, D.R., and P.H. Dahl, "Airborne noise contributions to the underwater noise sound field," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 129, 2498, doi:10.1121/1.3588252, 2011. |
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1 Apr 2011 |
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Contributions of airborne noise sources to the underwater noise field are the result of two acoustic fields: the transmitted and evanescent. The transmitted field can be represented by only those rays confined to a small cone (about 26 deg) where the reflection coefficient is real-valued. The evanescent field, which arises when rays are totally reflected from the surface, can also contribute to the underwater noise field. Unlike the transmitted field, the evanescent field does not propagate and decays exponentially with depth with a decay rate as a function of frequency. Determining the individual contribution of these two fields to the overall sound field is experimentally difficult to observe. One situation where these two fields can be observed individually occurs when an airplane flies overhead. The Doppler shift associated with tonal propeller noise is dependent on the acoustic path. The frequency separation of the two fields allows for separate analysis of the two fields. Measurements from aircraft (altitude 1000 ft) passing over a buoy equipped with a microphone 3 m above the surface and a hydrophone 2.5 m below the surface will be presented. Numerical simulations are presented along with the experimental observations. |
Observations and parabolic wave modeling of underwater pile driving impact noise Dahl, P.H., and P.G. Reinhall, "Observations and parabolic wave modeling of underwater pile driving impact noise," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 129, 2461, doi: 10.1121/1.3588093, 2011. |
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1 Apr 2011 |
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Pile driving in water produces extremely high sound levels in both surrounding air and underwater environments. In a companion work [Reinhall and Dahl] it is shown using finite element simulation that for underwater case the primary sound signal originates from a compression wave traveling down the pile at a speed in excess of Mach 3. In this work, we present measurements pile driving impact noise made from a marine construction site in Puget Sound using a vertical line array (VLA) positioned at ranges 815 m from full-scale impact pile driving. The measurements are modeled using the parabolic wave equation approach for which synthetic time series are generated (bandwidth 50-2050 Hz). The simulation is achieved by way of a phased array of point sources, representing one source traveling down the pile at supersonic speed. Pile end reflections are included and the process is repeated with both an up- and down-traveling time-delayed sources. With the field computed in this manner, excellent agreement is achieved between model and observations of peak pressure level, and the compression wave speed is also confirmed by way of arrival angle estimation using the VLA. Implications on transmission loss are also discussed. |
Underwater radiated noise measurements of a noise-reduced research vessel: Comparison between a U.S. Navy noise range and a simple hydrophone mooring De Robertis, A., C.D. Wilson, and P.H. Dahl, "Underwater radiated noise measurements of a noise-reduced research vessel: Comparison between a U.S. Navy noise range and a simple hydrophone mooring," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 129, 2462, doi:10.1121/1.3588099, 2011. |
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1 Apr 2011 |
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A feasibility study was undertaken to characterize underwater radiated noise for a new class of noise-reduced fisheries research vessels using a field-deployable hydrophone system. Recent studies have demonstrated that vessel-radiated noise can impact the behavior of fish, and that periodic monitoring of survey-vessel radiated noise is desirable to characterize potential biases in fish abundance estimates. Vessel radiated noise is traditionally measured at naval ranges, but lower-cost options are desirable. Beam aspect measurements of a noise-reduced vessel made at a U.S. Navy noise range are compared to those made using an experimental mooring equipped with commercially available instrumentation. Hydrophone depths and distance-to-the-vessel were comparable for the mooring and those used at the Southeast Alaska Acoustic Measurement Facility (SEAFAC). SEAFAC and mooring measurements were taken within a day of one another. Data processing was consistent with the recent American national standard for measurement of underwater sound from ships (ANSI-ASA S12.64-2009-Part 1). The measurements from the experimental mooring were precise and comparable to those made at SEAFAC. This suggests that reliable measurements suitable for monitoring the underwater radiated noise of vessels with low source levels can be made in the field. |
Vertical intensity structure in a shallow water waveguide Dall'Osto, D.R., P.H. Dahl, and J.W. Choi, "Vertical intensity structure in a shallow water waveguide," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 129, 2601, doi:10.1121/1.3588624, 2011. |
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1 Apr 2011 |
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Acoustic intensity in an ocean waveguide is described by the local pressure and particle velocity, both of which can be described as a sum of modes. Analysis of the interaction between these modal components gives insight into the formation of characteristic intensity structures, such as interference patterns. Observations of the modal structure of the pressure and vertical velocity in a shallow water waveguide are presented using experimental data from an experiment off Korean coastal waters, the transverse acoustic variability experiment (TAVEX) that took place in August of 2008 17 km northeast of the Ieodo weather station, in waters 62 m deep. Mode filtering is performed on a 16 element vertical array that spans the water column (3 m spacing) for broadband (imploding light bulb) sources detonated at ranges from 200 to 1000 m at 40 m depth. The vertical velocity field, determined through the finite-difference approximation, and the pressure field at 230 Hz are represented by six propagating modes and their corresponding modal amplitudes. The interaction of these modal components is analyzed and PE simulated data are presented for comparison. Nondimensional indices are formulated relating the modal components of vector intensity and their utility as field indicators will be discussed. |
Observations of 0th order head waves in the Yellow Sea Dahl, P.H., and J.W. Choi, "Observations of 0th order head waves in the Yellow Sea," In Proceedings, Second International Shallow-Water Acoustics Conference (SWAC'09), Shanghai, 16-20 September 2009, 133-139 (AIP, 2010). |
4 Oct 2010 |
Acoustic radiation from a submerged pile during pile driving Reinhall, P.G., and P.H. Dahl, "Acoustic radiation from a submerged pile during pile driving," In Proceedings, MTS/IEEE OCEANS 2010, Seattle, 20-23 September, doi:10.1109/OCEANS.2010.5663872 (MTS/IEEE, 2010). |
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20 Sep 2010 |
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Pile driving with an impact hammer is inherently a transient process and can produce very high sound levels. It is shown that the underwater noise during pile driving is due to a radial expansion of the pile that propagates along the pile after impact. This structural wave produces a wave front cone in the water, and a downward moving wave that continues into the sediment. An upward moving wave front is produced in the sediment after the first reflection of the structural wave, which is subsequently transmitted into the water. This process is repeated to produce an acoustic field that consists of wave fronts with alternating positive and negative angles. Good agreement in the estimate of the angles was obtained between a finite element wave propagation model and measurements taken during a full scale pile driving study. |
Characterizing underwater noise from industrial pile driving at close range Stockham, M.L., P.H. Dahl, and P.G. Reinhall, "Characterizing underwater noise from industrial pile driving at close range," In Proceedings, MTS/IEEE OCEANS 2010, Seattle, 20-23 September, doi:10.1109/OCEANS.2010.5663899 (MTS/IEEE, 2010). |
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20 Sep 2010 |
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Acoustic radiation in the water surrounding a ferry terminal pile driving project has been characterized based on 1/3-octave band filtering. The pressure field at approximately 10 meters is shown to be depth dependent based on data captured using a vertical line array. Decibel measurements of underwater sound are often expressed in reference to several non-interchangeable units, a summary of the differences of these references is presented. |
Implications of signal intensity fluctuations on vector sensor array processing Dall'Osto, D.R., and P.H. Dahl, "Implications of signal intensity fluctuations on vector sensor array processing," In Proceedings, MTS/IEEE OCEANS 2010, Seattle, 20-23 September, doi:10.1109/OCEANS.2010.5663783 (MTS/IEEE, 2010). |
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20 Sep 2010 |
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Vector sensor processing relies on the covariance matrix for both a single vector sensor and a larger matrix from a vector sensor array. The elements of these covariance matrices have physical interpretation in terms of complex intensity. The presence of reactive intensity on the array shows up in the off diagonal elements of the covariance matrix and has significant implications on direction of arrival (DOA) algorithms. Sources of reactive intensity in an underwater waveguide are dependent on the geometry of the system and fluctuations in these quantities affect the ability to increase the array aperture to better resolve arrival angles. |
Observations and modeling of angular compression and vertical spatial coherence in sea surface forward scattering Dahl, P.H., "Observations and modeling of angular compression and vertical spatial coherence in sea surface forward scattering," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 127, 96-103, doi:10.1121/1.3268594, 2010. |
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1 Jan 2010 |
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Measurements and modeling of spatial coherence and related angular spreading associated with forward scattering from the sea surface are presented. The measurements were taken in waters 80 m deep off the New Jersey coast in August 2006. Acoustic signals from a source at depth 40 m were recorded on a vertical line array of length 1.4 m, centered at depth 25 m, and at range 200 m. Measurements in the 1420-kHz frequency range are reported; the rms waveheight H was 0.16 m, setting kH as ~10, where k is acoustic wavenumber. A systematic study of measurements taken over four sourcereceiver bearing angles separated by 90 deg suggests a null influence of changing bearing angle or equivalently directional wave effects. Sound speed was characterized by a downward-refracting profile. Refraction modifies the vertical angular spread due to rough sea surface scattering, which can be understood from Snell's law. The Snell mapping is smooth, so an approximation based on the mean grazing angle provides a functional relation between the angular variance near the surface and that at the receiver. The latter is measurably reduced owing to refraction, the effect called angular compression, and a parameter that quantifies this effect is defined. |
The evolution of vertical spatial coherence with range from source Dahl. P.H., D. Tang, and J.W. Choi, "The evolution of vertical spatial coherence with range from source," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 125, 2511, 2009. |
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1 Apr 2009 |
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Vertical spatial coherence for shallow water propagation at frequencies 110 kHz is studied as function of range (50 to 5000 m), as part of the Shallow-Water 2006 program that took place off the coast of New Jersey in August 2006 in waters 80 m deep. An acoustic source was deployed from the R/V Knorr at depths 30 and 40 m and signals were recorded on a moored receiving system consisting of two 1.4 m long vertical line arrays (VLA) centered at depths 25 and 50 m. At all ranges, spatial coherence (normalized spatial correlation) is locally stationary and depends on element vertical separation d up to the maximum kd (59) afforded by the VLA, where k is acoustic wave number. For range normalized by depth, r*, less than about 10, spatial coherence is oscillatory, with non-zero imaginary part, reflecting the inclusion of multipaths for which no single path dominates. For r* greater than 10, spatial coherence tends to exhibit a monotonic decay with kd and the imaginary part vanishes reflecting symmetry about 0 deg vertical arrival angle. The coherence also increases with r* reflecting the change in modal structure. |
On scattering effects due to the proximity and relative position of two bubbles in a sound field Kapodistrias, G., and P.H. Dahl, "On scattering effects due to the proximity and relative position of two bubbles in a sound field," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 108, 2485, 2000. |
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1 Nov 2008 |
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Recently the authors published results from a theoretical and experimental investigation on scattering of sound from two bubbles symmetrically arranged about the combined beam axis of a set of transducers [J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 107, 30063017 (2000)]. In this presentation the investigation is extended to two additional geometries, with the two bubble array placed at angles of 0° and 45° from the combined beam axis. For each angle, the half interbubble distance d is varied such that the dimensionless variable kd ranges from 0.25 (for the 0° case) and 0.210 (for the 45° case), where k is the acoustic wave number. Modeling is accomplished by using a closed-form solution derived from the multiple scattering series, with the bubble scattering function expressed in terms of spherical harmonics. Experimental data are obtained by symmetrically arranging two bubbles, each of radius a=425 µm, on a fine nylon thread, with the bubbles insonified by tone bursts with a center frequency of 120 kHz. The data closely agree with the simulations, and it is verified that, regardless of the geometry, for kd≤1 the response of the two bubble array drastically departs from the one due to single scattering. This departure is attributed to multiple scattering and is manifested as a reduction in backscattered radiation. |
Field measurements and modeling of attenuation from near-surface bubbles for frequencies 1-20 kHz Dahl, P.H., J.W. Choi, N.J. Williams, and H.C. Graber, "Field measurements and modeling of attenuation from near-surface bubbles for frequencies 1-20 kHz," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 124, EL163-EL169, 2008. |
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28 Aug 2008 |
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Measurements of excess attenuation from near-surface bubbles from the Shallow Water '06 experiment are reported. These are transmission measurements made over the frequency range 120 kHz, and they demonstrate a frequency, grazing angle, and wind speed dependence in attenuation. Data modeling points to bubble void fractions of order 10-6 in effect for wind speeds 1013 m/s. Simultaneous measures of wind speed made within 1.5 and 11 km of the open water experimental location differed by 2 m/s in their respective 30-min average; this has cautionary implications for empirical models for bubble attenuation that are a strong function of wind speed. |
Mid-frequency acoustic propagation in shallow water on the New Jersey shelf. II: Intensity fluctuation Tang, D., F.S. Henyey, Z. Wang, K.L. Williams, D. Rouseff, P.H. Dahl, J. Quijano, and J.W. Choi, "Mid-frequency acoustic propagation in shallow water on the New Jersey shelf. II: Intensity fluctuation," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 124, EL91-EL96, 2008. |
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28 Aug 2008 |
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The scintillation index and the intensity cumulative distribution function of mid-frequency (210 kHz) sound propagation are presented at ranges of 19 km in a shallow water channel. The fluctuations are due to water column sound speed variability. It is found that intensity is only correlated over a narrow frequency band (50200 Hz) and the bandwidth is independent of center frequency and range. Furthermore, the intensity probability distribution peaks at zero for all frequencies, and follows an exponential distribution at small values. |
Mid-frequency acoustic propagation in shallow water on the New Jersey shelf: Mean intensity Tang, D., F.S. Henyey, Z. Wang, K.L. Williams, D. Rouseff, P.H. Dahl, J. Quijano, and J.W. Choi, "Mid-frequency acoustic propagation in shallow water on the New Jersey shelf: Mean intensity," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 124, EL85-EL90, 2008. |
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28 Aug 2008 |
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Mid-frequency (110 kHz) sound propagation was measured at ranges 19 km in shallow water in order to investigate intensity statistics. Warm water near the bottom results in a sound speed minimum. Environmental measurements include sediment sound speed and water sound speed and density from a towed conductivity-temperature-depth chain. Ambient internal waves contribute to acoustic fluctuations. A simple model involving modes with random phases predicts the mean transmission loss to within a few dB. Quantitative ray theory fails due to near axial focusing. Fluctuations of the intensity field are dominated by water column variability. |
Observations of the R reflector and sediment interface reflection at the Shallow Water '06 central site Choi, J.W., P.H. Dahl, and J.A. Goff, "Observations of the R reflector and sediment interface reflection at the Shallow Water '06 central site," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 124, EL128-EL134, 2008. |
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28 Aug 2008 |
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Acoustic bottom-interacting measurements from the Shallow Water '06 experiment (frequency range 120 kHz) are presented. These are co-located with coring and stratigraphic studies showing a thin (~ 20 cm) higher sound speed layer overlaying a thicker ( ~ 20 m) lower sound speed layer ending at a high-impedance reflector (R reflector). Reflections from the R reflector and analysis of the bottom reflection coefficient magnitude for the upper two sediment layers confirm both these features. Geoacoustic parameters are estimated, dispersion effects addressed, and forward modeling using the parabolic wave equation undertaken. The reflection coefficient measurements suggest a nonlinear attenuation law for the thin layer of sandy sediments. |
Fluctuation of mid-frequency propagation in shallow water Tang, D., F.S. Henyey, K.L. Williams, D. Rouseff, P.H. Dahl, Z. Wang, J.E. Quijano, and J.W. Choi, "Fluctuation of mid-frequency propagation in shallow water," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 123, 3433, 2008. |
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1 May 2008 |
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As part of the ONR-sponsored SW06 experiment, mid-frequency sound propagation was measured at ranges 110 km in the frequency band of 210 kHz in August, 2006. The water depth is 80 m and the source depth is 30 m, close to the minimum of a duct with a thermocline above and a warm salty water below. The receivers are clustered into two groups, one at 25 m depth, the other at 50 m. The region has active internal wave activity during this time. Because the source is near the axis of the sound channel, it is observed that propagation is dominated by trapped modes and behaves similar to sound propagation in a deep water duct. Amplitude fluctuations and cross-frequency correlations are estimated. The scintillation index as a function of frequency and bandwidth is calculated. |
Mid-frequency bottom interaction measurements off the New Jersey continental shelf Choi, J.W., and P.H. Dahl, "Mid-frequency bottom interaction measurements off the New Jersey continental shelf," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 123, 3084, 2008. |
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1 May 2008 |
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Two kinds of bottom interaction measurements conducted in waters 80 m deep off the North American continental shelf as part of Shallow Water 06 (August, 2006) are discussed. In each, acoustic signals were recorded on two, colocated vertical line arrays of length 1.4 m, one at depth 25 m, and other at depth 50 m. The source was deployed at depth 40 m from the R/V Knorr that could either be positioned or towed at rate 0.1 m/s. The first, "bottom reflection" is interpreted as a measure of the modulus of the plane wave reflection coefficient as functions of frequency (120 kHz) and grazing angle associated with the discrete set of ranges (50300 m). The second represents a "move-out" type measurement with source towed away from the receiver, and reflection at continuous angles associated with the 50300 m range. Frequency range was 12 kHz, and as the source was 5 m off the bottom, spherical wave effects are investigated. Both measurements were carried out over the same four directions originating from the receiver, each separated by 90 degrees. Physical processes responsible for the observations in each case are discussed and modeled. |
Shallow Water '06: A joint acoustic propagation/nonlinear internal wave physics experiment Tang, D., J.F. Moum, J.F. Lynch, P. Abbott, R. Chapman, P.H. Dahl, T.F. Duda, G. Gawarkiewicz, S. Glenn, J.A. Goff, H. Graber, J. Kemp, A. Maffei, J.D. Nash, and A. Newhall, "Shallow Water '06: A joint acoustic propagation/nonlinear internal wave physics experiment," Oceanography, 20, 156-167, 2007. |
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1 Dec 2007 |
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Since the end of the Cold War, the US Navy has had an increasing interest in continental shelves and slopes as operational areas. To work in such areas requires a good understanding of ocean acoustics, coastal physical oceanography, and, in the modern era, autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) operations. |
Environmental noise studies in Puget Sound Dall'Osto, D., and P.H. Dahl, "Environmental noise studies in Puget Sound," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 122, 3083, 2007. |
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1 Nov 2007 |
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The ambient noise environment at a site in North Puget Sound, Washington, depth ~100 m, located within the nearby Smith Island marine sanctuary, is studied. The measurement system consists of a buoy for which the surface expression houses a microphone at nominal height 2 m above the sea surface, with multiple underwater acoustic sensors suspended in the water column. The recording bandwidth for the air system corresponds to audio band, whereas the underwater system records ambient noise at frequencies up to 50 kHz. The two systems are recorded coherently. One goal of this pilot study is to examine different components of the noise budget, including injection of noise from airplane flyovers, and correlation between pressures above and below water. Another goal relates to properties of the noise field that could possibly impact echolocation by southern resident killer whales; these properties likely being restricted to noise levels at frequencies above 25 kHz. Besides representing an important marine mammal habitat, a key advantage of this site is the availability of meteorological and sea surface wave data, obtained from Smith Island and a nearby NOAA buoy, and vessel and air traffic data. Results from the summer 2007 field work will be presented. |
High-frequency underwater sound Dahl, P.H., "High-frequency underwater sound," In: Encyclopedia of Electrical and Electronics Engineering, edited by J.G. Webster, 1-19 (New York: John Wiley & Sons, 2007). |
30 Jan 2007 |
Underwater ambient noise Dahl, P.H., J.H. Miller, D.H. Cato, and R.K. Andrew, "Underwater ambient noise," Acoustics Today, 1, 23-33, 2007. |
30 Jan 2007 |
Precursor arrivals in the Yellow Sea, their distinction from first-order head waves, and their geoacoustic inversion Dahl, P.H., and J.W. Choi, "Precursor arrivals in the Yellow Sea, their distinction from first-order head waves, and their geoacoustic inversion," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 120, 3525-3533, 2006. |
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1 Dec 2006 |
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Measurements made as part of the 1996 Yellow Sea experiment at location 37°N, 124°E, undertaken by China and the U.S. are analyzed. Signals generated by explosive sources were received by a 60-m-length vertical line array deployed in waters 75 m deep. Evidence is presented that precursor arrivals measured at ranges less than 1 km are refracted waves that are zeroth order in their ray series classification, and this directly points to the existence of a gradient in sediment sound speed. In contrast, first-order head waves, which are much weaker in amplitude, would exist only if this gradient were absent. It is found that the energy spectrum of precursor arrivals agrees well with a zeroth-order model, i.e., it is proportional to the source amplitude spectrum, S(f), where f is frequency, rather than a first-order model, which would have it proportional to S(f)/f. From travel time analysis the sediment sound speed just below the water-sediment interface is estimated to be 1573 m/s with a gradient of 1.1 s-1, and from analysis of the energy spectrum of the precursor arrivals the sediment attenuation is estimated to be 0.08 dB/m/kHz over the frequency range 150420 Hz. The results apply to a nominal sediment depth of 100 m. |
First-order and zeroth-order head waves, their sequence, and implications for geoacoustic inversion Choi, J.W., and P.H. Dahl, "First-order and zeroth-order head waves, their sequence, and implications for geoacoustic inversion," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 119, 3660-3668, doi:10.1121/1.2195110, 2006. |
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1 Jun 2006 |
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The relation between the head wave and an arrival often called a ground wave is analyzed with parabolic equation-based simulations, and an interpretation of such a ground wave as a head wave sequence is presented. For a Pekeris waveguide the envelope of the spectrum of the ground wave arrival corresponds to the spectrum of a single head wave, and spectral peaks correspond to odd multiples of the mode-1 cutoff frequency. This head wave is first order in its ray series classification and its amplitude spectrum goes as|S(f)|/f, where S(f) is the source amplitude spectrum. Basic variations from a Pekeris waveguide are considered; isospeed layers or a positive sound speed gradient in the seabed can each give rise to arrivals that are zeroth order in ray series classification and higher amplitude. For a sound speed gradient there is either a low-amplitude interference head wave whose properties are akin to a first-order head wave, or a high-amplitude interference head wave or non-interfering refracted wave whose properties are zeroth order and spectra follow |S(f)|. Parametric dependences for distinguishing these arrivals and implications for geoacoustic inversion are discussed. |
Geoacoustic inversion in the Yellow Sea using precursor arrivals Dahl, P.H., and J.W. Choi, "Geoacoustic inversion in the Yellow Sea using precursor arrivals," Proceedings, Ninth Western Pacific Acoustics Conference, Seoul, South Korea, June 2006. |
1 Jun 2006 |
Measurement and simulation of the channel intensity impulse response for a site in the East China Sea Choi, J.W., and P.H. Dahl, "Measurement and simulation of the channel intensity impulse response for a site in the East China Sea," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 119, 2677-2685, doi:10.1121/1.2189449, 2006. |
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1 May 2006 |
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A model for the channel intensity impulse response Ic(t) is presented that is generally applicable for source-receiver ranges less than ten water depths. The separate impulse response functions from each arrival, such as the single surface bounce or surface-to-bottom bounce, are modeled using bistatic scattering concepts and are incoherently summed for the total response function. The expression Ic(t) is equivalent to a time-averaged response and embodies the boundary scattering and reflection physics corresponding to the center frequency at which computations are made. To compare with observations, Ic(t) is convolved with representations of the 8- and 16-kHz continuous wave (CW) pulses, and an 816-kHz frequency-modulated (FM) pulse, that were used in the Asian Sea International Acoustics Experiment conducted in the East China Sea (depth 105 m). For the FM case the computation frequency is 12 kHz, the center frequency of the FM pulse. It is found that six primary arrivals dominate the response for ranges less than about 1 km. With modeling of Ic(t) limited to these paths, the basic structure of Ic(t) is set by bottom properties and acquisition geometry with some changes in intrapath time spreading that depend on sea surface conditions. |
The East China Sea as an underwater acoustic communication channel: Measurements of the channel impulse response Dahl, P.H., and J.W. Choi, "The East China Sea as an underwater acoustic communication channel: Measurements of the channel impulse response," U.S. Navy J. Underwater Acoust., 56, 141-154, 2006. |
15 Jan 2006 |
Observations of zeroth-order head waves in the Yellow Sea Dahl, P.H., and J.W. Choi, "Observations of zeroth-order head waves in the Yellow Sea," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 118, 1969, 2005 |
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1 Sep 2005 |
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As part of the 1996 joint U.SChina Experiment in the Yellow Sea, head wave arrivals were measured in waters 75 m deep and at range ~700 m, on a vertical line array (VLA) that spanned the water column. Head waves are strongly linked with properties of the seabed, and thus provide a useful measure for geoacoustic inversion carried out at relatively short range. Based on a time-domain and beam-forming analysis of the VLA data, the sediment sound speed and its gradient are estimated, and the conclusion is made that the observed head waves are kinematically consistent with zeroth-order in their ray-series classification. This conclusion is verified by simulation using the RAM parabolic equation algorithm, and it is found that the dynamic properties of the data also point to a zeroth-order, rather than a first-order, classification. The classification in turn establishes a baseline model for the head wave energy spectrum that is compared with the measured data. It is found that the estimated energy spectrum agrees well with a zero-order model, i.e., proportional to the source spectrum, S(f), modified by sediment attenuation, rather than a first-order model, S(f)/f. |
On spectral and amplitude properties of first- and zero-order head waves, and implications for geoacoustic inversion Choi, J.W., and P.H. Dahl, "On spectral and amplitude properties of first- and zero-order head waves, and implications for geoacoustic inversion," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 118, 1969, 2005. |
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1 Jul 2005 |
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Acoustic cues related to the voice source, including harmonic structure and spectral tilt, were examined for relevance to prosodic boundary detection. The measurements considered here comprise five categories: duration, pitch, harmonic structure, spectral tilt, and amplitude. Distributions of the measurements and statistical analysis show that the measurements may be used to differentiate between prosodic categories. Detection experiments on the Boston University Radio Speech Corpus show equal error detection rates around 70% for accent and boundary detection, using only the acoustic measurements described, without any lexical or syntactic information. Further investigation of the detection results shows that duration and amplitude measurements, and, to a lesser degree, pitch measurements, are useful for detecting accents, while all voice source measurements except pitch measurements are useful for boundary detection. |
Alaskan river environmental acoustics Dahl, P.H., C. Pfisterer, and H.J. Geiger, "Alaskan river environmental acoustics," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 117, 2380, 2005 |
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2 Apr 2005 |
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Sonars are used by the Alaska Department of Fish and Game (ADF&G) to obtain daily and hourly estimates of at least four species of migratory salmon during their seasonal migration which lasts from June to beginning of September. Suspended sediments associated with a river's sediment load is an important issue for ADF&G's sonar operations. Acoustically, the suspended sediments are a source of both volume reverberation and excess attenuation beyond that expected in fresh water. Each can impact daily protocols for fish enumeration via sonar. In this talk, results from an environmental acoustic study conducted in the Kenai River (June 1999) using 420 kHz and 200 kHz side looking sonars, and in the Yukon River (July 2001) using a 120 kHz side looking sonar, are discussed. Estimates of the volume scattering coefficient and attenuation are related to total suspended sediments. The relative impact of bubble scattering and sediment scattering is also discussed. |
Forward scattering from the sea surface: Observations of both subtle and profound effects of bubbles in single-interaction measurements Dahl, P.H., "Forward scattering from the sea surface: Observations of both subtle and profound effects of bubbles in single-interaction measurements," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 117, 2433, 2005. |
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1 Apr 2005 |
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For frequencies of O(10) kHz and above, field data show that near-surface bubbles impact forward scattering from the sea surface in three phases. The first occurs under mild conditions (wind speed less than 57 m/s); here a pulse forward scattered from the sea surface is extended in time, but only at levels ~30 dB below the peak level, which itself is not attenuated. The second occurs under more vigorous conditions (wind speed 712 m/s); here a significant energy loss is observed, but time and angle spreading (dominated by rough surface scattering) remain relatively unchanged. The third occurs under still more vigorous conditions (wind speed greater than ~12 m/s). Here, there is near total occlusion of the sea surface, time and angle spreading are manifestly altered, and bubble-mediated energy loss becomes bounded by scattering from bubbles. Examples from ASIAEX East China Sea and other archival data sets will be discussed along with a model for bubble-mediated energy loss in forward scattering from the sea surface. In the case of near total occlusion, an interesting example of the knock-down of horizontal coherence will be discussed along with a model that utilizes the van CittertZernike Theorem. |
Basic technologies in ultrasound Matre, K. and P.H. Dahl, "Basic technologies in ultrasound," in Basic and New Aspects in Gastrointestinal Ultrasoundography, S. Odegaard, H. Gregerson, and O. Giija, eds. (World Scientific, Amsterdam, 2005) |
30 Jan 2005 |
The sea surface bounce channel: Bubble-mediated energy loss and time/angle spreading Dahl, P.H., "The sea surface bounce channel: Bubble-mediated energy loss and time/angle spreading," Proceedings, American Institute of Physics Conference on High Frequency Acoustics, edited by M.B. Porter, M. Siderius, and W.K. Kuperman, vol 728, pp. 194-204, doi:10.1063/1.1843013 (New York, 2004). |
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18 Nov 2004 |
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A model is presented for the energy loss in the sea surface forward bounce channel due to attenuation from wind-speed-dependent bubbles; the model is compared to data from ASIAEX and other archival data sets. At high wind speeds the model predicts an energy loss bound, i.e., no further attenuation with increasing wind speed. Prior to reaching this bound and while there is attenuation, time and angle spreading in the forward bounce path remain largely controlled by the spectral properties of the airsea interface, i.e., they remain unchanged by the bubbles. Once bounding of energy loss occurs, initiated by the dominance of bubble scattering over airsea interface scattering, time and angle spreading of the arrival change profoundly. |
Bound and free surface waves in a large wind-wave tank Plant, W.J., P.H. Dahl, J.-P. Giovanangeli, and H. Branger, "Bound and free surface waves in a large wind-wave tank," J. Geophys. Res., 109, 10.1029/2004JC002342, 2004. |
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5 Oct 2004 |
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Microwave and acoustic systems operated in the large wind-wave tank in Luminy, Marseille, France, show that most small-scale waves produced at large angles to the wind are products of breaking events bound to longer waves in the tank. These longer waves propagate at the dominant wave phase speed for fetches near 7 m but travel at speeds corresponding to the phase speed of a wave half as long as the dominant wave at fetches near 26 m. The microwave and acoustic systems operated at both 8 mm and 2 cm wavelengths. They were set to look at the same surface spot simultaneously at the same incidence and azimuth angles. Measurements were made at seven wind speeds, five incidence angles, seven azimuth angles, and two nominal fetches. Two peaks were found in either the microwave or acoustic Doppler spectrum when looking upwind or downwind but never in both. The low-frequency peak is due to Bragg scattering from freely propagating short waves, while the high-frequency peak is a result of Bragg scattering from short waves bound to longer waves. At azimuth angles not aligned with the wind direction the high-frequency peak was found to move lower until it merged with the low-frequency peak at azimuth angles around 60°. |
Geoacoustic inversion results from the ASIAEX East China Sea Experiment Potty, G.R., J.H. Miller, P.H. Dahl, and C.J. Lazauski, "Geoacoustic inversion results from the ASIAEX East China Sea Experiment," IEEE J. Ocean. Eng., 29, 1000-1011, doi:10.1109/JOE.2004.833224, 2004. |
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1 Oct 2004 |
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This work presents the results of geoacoustic inversions carried out using data from the Asian Seas International Acoustics Experiment East China Sea. Broadband data from small explosive sources were used for the inversions. Compressional wave speeds in the sediment and basement layers were estimated using a nonlinear, long-range, tomographic inversion technique based on group speed dispersion. This tomographic technique is a hybrid approach that combines a genetic algorithm for global parameter search with a Levenberg-Marquardt method for fine-scale parameter tuning. The results were compared with data from gravity and piston cores and a geophysical survey conducted at the experimental location using a watergun and towed hydrophone array. |
Mid to high frequency bottom loss in the East China Sea Choi, J.W., and P.H. Dahl, "Mid to high frequency bottom loss in the East China Sea," IEEE J. Ocean. Eng., 29, 1038-1045, doi:10.1109/JOE.2004.834178, 2004. |
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1 Oct 2004 |
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Bottom-loss measurements made in the East China Sea in MayJune 2001 as part of the Asian Sea International Acoustics Experiment as a function of frequency (220 kHz) and seabed grazing angle (15°&3150;24°) are presented. The measurements are interpreted as estimates of the modulus of the plane wave reflection coefficient and data are compared to predicted values using a reflection coefficient model, based on a two-layered sediment for which the sound speed in the surficial sediment layer is allowed to vary as a linear k2 profile, where k is acoustic wave number. The region below this layer is modeled as a half-space with constant density and sound speed. The reflection coefficient model is driven by eight geoacoustic parameters; these are estimated from the data by minimizing the weighted squared error between the data and the model predictions for a candidate set of parameters. The parameter estimates for the sediment layer are thickness, 0.9±0.5 m; density, 2.0±0.1 g/cm3; and attenuation, 0.25±0.05 dB/m/kHz, with sediment layer sound speed increasing from 1557±4 m/s at the water-sediment interface to 1625±35 m/s at a depth of 0.9 m. The parameter estimates for the half-space are density, 2.0±0.1 g/cm3; attenuation, 0.25±0.15 dB/m/kHz; and sound speed, 1635±52 m/s. Variances for these estimates are derived using the Bootstrap method. This parameter set produced model curves that agreed reasonably well with the observations of bottom loss over the entire frequency range and is consistent with the range of independently measured geoacoustic variables. Since this mid-to-high-frequency data set does not provide detailed information about the sediment structure for depths beyond about 3 m, the geoacoustic parameter set is more properly viewed as description of the sediment layer and sediments in the underlying 2 m. Similarly, a self-consistent construction of a geoacoustic model for the East China Sea should necessarily amalgamate the mid-to-high-frequency results given here with results obtained at lower frequencies. |
Overview of the results from the Asian Seas International Acoustics Experiment in the East China Sea Dahl, P.H., R. Zhang, J.H. Miller, L.R. Bartek, Z. Peng, S.R. Ramp, J.-X. Zhou, C.S. Chiu, J.F. Lynch, J.A. Simmen, and R.C. Spindel, "Overview of the results from the Asian Seas International Acoustics Experiment in the East China Sea," IEEE J. Ocean. Eng., 29, 920-928, doi:10.1109/JOE.2005.843159, 2004. |
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1 Oct 2004 |
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The Asian Seas International Acoustics Experiment (ASIAEX) included two major field programs, one in the South China Sea and the other in the East China Sea (ECS). This paper presents an overview of research results from ASIAEX ECS conducted between May 28 and June 9, 2001. The primary emphasis of the field program was shallow-water acoustic propagation, focused on boundary interaction and geoacoustic inversion. The study area's central point was located at 29° 40.67'N, 126° 49.39'E, which is situated 500 km east of the Chinese coastline off Shanghai. The acoustic and supporting environmental measurements are summarized, along with research results to date, and references to papers addressing specific issues in more detail are given. |
Reverberation vertical coherence and sea-bottom geoacoustic inversion in shallow water Zhou, J.-X., X.-Z. Zhang, P.H. Rogers, J.A. Simmen, P.H. Dahl, G. Jin, and Z. Peng, "Reverberation vertical coherence and sea-bottom geoacoustic inversion in shallow water," IEEE J. Ocean. Eng., 29, 988-999, doi:10.1109/JOE.2004.836401, 2004. |
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1 Oct 2004 |
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Optimal array-processing techniques in the ocean often require knowledge of the spatial coherence of the reverberation. A mathematical model is derived for the reverberation vertical coherence (RVC) in shallow water (SW). A method for analysis of RVC data is introduced. Measured reverberation cross-correlation coefficients as a function of time and frequency, obtained during the Asian Seas International Acoustic Experiment (ASIAEX) in the East China Sea, are reported. SW reverberation from a single shot provides a continuous spatial sampling of the surrounding sound field up to several tens of kilometers and holds valuable information on the geoacoustic properties of the sea floor over this distance. SW reverberation data can, therefore, be used as the basis for a quick and inexpensive method for geoacoustic inversion and has the obvious advantage that acquiring the data in situ requires only a single platform. This paper considers the use of the vertical coherence of the reverberation as the starting point for such an inversion. Sound speed and attenuation in the sea bottom at the ASIAEX site are obtained over a frequency range of 100-1500 Hz by finding values that provide the best match between the measured and predicted RVC. |
Seabed acoustic parameters from dispersion analysis and transmission loss in the East China Sea Peng, Z., J.-X. Zhou, P.H. Dahl, and R. Zhang, "Seabed acoustic parameters from dispersion analysis and transmission loss in the East China Sea," IEEE J. Ocean. Eng., 29, 1038-1045, doi:10.1109/JOE.2004.836400, 2004. |
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1 Oct 2004 |
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As a part of the Asian Seas International Acoustic Experiment (ASIAEX) in the East China Sea, sound propagation signals from wideband explosive sources were measured using a 32-element vertical line array. Measurements were made as a function of range in two perpendicular tracks. Sea-bed geoacoustic parameters based on a fluid half-space geoacoustic model (sound speed, density, and attenuation) are inverted from the sound propagation in the frequency range 100500 Hz. The sea-bed sound speed and density were first derived from mode arrival time differences which were obtained using a spatial mode filtering technique. Sea-bed acoustic attenuation was subsequently estimated by comparing measured transmission loss with model results. |
The shelf-edge environment in the central East China Sea and its impact on low-frequency acoustic propagation Ramp, S.R., C.S. Chiu, F.H. Bahr, Y. Qi, P.H. Dahl, J.H. Miller, J.F. Lynch, R. Zhang, and J.-X. Zhou, "The shelf-edge environment in the central East China Sea and its impact on low-frequency acoustic propagation," IEEE J. Ocean. Eng., 29, 1011-1031, doi:10.1109/JOE.2004.840842, 2004. |
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1 Oct 2004 |
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Two field programs, both parts of the Asian Seas International Acoustics Experiment (ASIAEX), were carried out in the central East China Sea (28° to 30° N, 126° 30' to 128°E) during April 2000 and June 2001. The goal of these programs was to study the interactions between the shelf edge environment and acoustic propagation at a wide range of frequencies and spatial scales. The low-frequency across-slope propagation was studied using a synthesis of data collected during both years including conductivity-temperature-depth (CTD) and mooring data from 2000, and XBT, thermistor chain, and wide-band source data from 2001. The water column variability during both years was dominated by the Kuroshio Current flowing from southwest to northeast over the continental slope. The barotropic tide was a mixed diurnal/semidiurnal tide with moderate amplitude compared to other parts of the Yellow and East China Sea. A large amplitude semidiurnal internal tide was also a prominent feature of the data during both years. Bursts of high-frequency internal waves were often observed, but these took the form of internal solitons only once, when a rapid off-shelf excursion of the Kuroshio coincided with the ebbing tide. |
Forward scattering from the sea surface and the van Cittert-Zernike theorem Dahl, P.H., "Forward scattering from the sea surface and the van Cittert-Zernike theorem," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 115, 589-599, 2004. |
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1 Feb 2004 |
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The van CittertZernike theorem is used to generate models for the spatial coherence of a sound field that has been forward scattered from the sea surface. The theorem relates the spatial coherence of an observed wave field to the distant source intensity distribution associated with this field. In this case, the sea surface upon ensonification is taken to be the source, and the sea-surface bistatic cross section corrected for transmission loss is taken as a surrogate for the source intensity distribution. Improvements in methodology for generating an estimate of the 2D autocorrelation function for sea surface waveheight variation, necessary to compute the bistatic cross section, are documented in the Appendix. Upon invoking certain approximations, simple expressions for the characteristic length scales of vertical, horizontal, and horizontallongitudinal coherence, are derived from the theorem. The three coherence length scales identify a coherence volume for the spatial coherence of a sound field arriving via the surface bounce channel. Models for spatial coherence derived from the van CittertZernike theorem without these approximations compare reasonably well with measurements of complex vertical coherence made at 8 kHz and 20 kHz in the East China Sea as part of the 2001 ASIAEX field program. In terms of the ASIAEX field geometries and sea-surface conditions, at frequency of 20 kHz the coherence volume is a vertical layer 0.5 m thick by 3 m in each of the two horizontal dimensions; at 8 kHz these dimensions increase by a factor of 2.5, representing the ratio of the two frequencies. |
Acoustic tomography for monitoring the Sea of Japan: a pilot experiment Spindel, R.C., J. Na, P.H. Dahl, S. Oh, C. Eggen, Y.G. Kim, V.A. Akulichev, and Y.N. Morgunov, "Acoustic tomography for monitoring the Sea of Japan: a pilot experiment," IEEE J. Ocean. Eng., 28, 297-302, 10.1109/JOE.2003.811896, 2003. |
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9 Jul 2003 |
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A pilot experiment was conducted in the Sea of Japan (also called the East Sea) in September-October 1999, to assess the possibility of using acoustic tomographic techniques for monitoring water mass structure and dynamics. Acoustic m-sequence signals at various frequencies between 250 and 634 Hz were transmitted from bottom-mounted acoustic sources in shallow water off the coast of Vladivostok to vertical-array receiving systems deployed off the north coast of Ulleung-Do island (S. Korea), 558 km to the south. The data are analyzed for temporal correlation, time spread, and transmission loss and are interpreted in terms of a tomographic system for monitoring the East Sea. |
Program fosters advances in shallow-water acoustics in southeastern Asia Ramp, S.R., J.F. Lynch, P.H. Dahl, C.-S. Chiu, and J.A. Simmen, "Program fosters advances in shallow-water acoustics in southeastern Asia," Eos Trans. AGU, 84, 361 and 367, doi:10.1029/2003EO370001, 2003. |
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30 Jan 2003 |
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Two impressive field programs were recently completed in the South and East China Seas as part of the Asian Seas International Acoustics Experiment (ASIAEX). Under the direction of the U.S. Office of Naval Research (ONR), scientists from several countries joined together to collect unique and high-quality acoustical, oceanographic, and geophysical data at the same place and time, enabling underwater acoustic fluctuations to be understood and modeled at the space and time scales of interest. A comprehensive field effort such as this one is required to decipher the cause and effect between environmental and acoustic variability which exist on a wide range of time and space scales. |
Scattering from a single bubble near a roughened air-water interface: Laboratory measurements and modeling Dahl, P.H., and G. Kapodistrias, "Scattering from a single bubble near a roughened air-water interface: Laboratory measurements and modeling," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 113, 94-101, 2003. |
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30 Jan 2003 |
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The problem of scattering from a single bubble located close to a slightly roughened, airwater interface is studied both theoretically and experimentally. Two well-controlled laboratory experiments were performed to investigate the effects of surface roughness on the scattering response of the bubble. In the first experiment, a bubble of radius 1200 μm was placed on a fine thread at a variable distance, d, from the mean-still-water level of the surface, which was roughened using a wind source. In the second experiment, a bubble of radius 800 μm was utilized, while the water surface was roughened using a plunger wave-making source. The waveheights and important characteristic length scales associated with each experiment were quantified using digital photography. The wind source produced waveheights that were represented by a Gaussian distribution, while the plunger source produced waveheights that were represented by a bimodal distribution. To model the acoustic measurements, an expression describing the four scattering paths, from source to bubble to receiver, was used. A random phase shift due to the surface roughness was added to the paths that interacted with the surface, and expectations of this phase shift were computed based on the analytical representations for the waveheight distribution. The data show good agreement with the simulations and the sensitivity of scattering from a subsurface bubble to small changes in waveheight is illustrated. The experiments highlight important parametric dependencies, which are summarized here, and the relation between monostatic and bistatic scattering is also discussed. |
The contribution of bubbles to high-frequency sea surface backscatter: A 24-h time series of field measurements Dahl, P.H., "The contribution of bubbles to high-frequency sea surface backscatter: A 24-h time series of field measurements," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 113, 769-780, doi:10.1121/1.1532029, 2003. |
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30 Jan 2003 |
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Measurements of acoustic sea surface backscattering, wind speed, and surface wave spectra were made continually over a 24-h period in an experiment conducted in 26 m of water near the Dry Tortugus collection of islands off south Florida in February 1995. The backscattering measurements were made at a frequency of 30 kHz and a sea surface grazing angle of 20°; a time series of the decibel equivalent of this variable, called SS20, was studied in terms of its dependence on environmental variables. On occasion reliable estimates of scattering in the grazing range 15°27° were also obtained during the 24 hours. The scattering data exhibited evidence, in terms of scattering level and grazing angle dependence, of scattering from near-surface bubbles rather than scattering from the rough airsea interface. The scattering data were compared with a model for σb, the apparent backscattering cross section per unit area due to bubble scattering, that is driven by a parameter, βI, equal to the depth-integrated extinction cross section per unit volume. Using an empirical model for βI based on data from a 1977 experiment conducted in pelagic waters, model predictions agreed reasonably well with the 1995 measurements presented here. Additional modeldata comparisons were made using four measurements from a 1992 experiment conducted in pelagic waters. Finally, the 24-h time series of acoustic scattering exhibited a hysteresis effect, wherein for a given wind speed, there was a tendency for the scattering level to be higher if prior winds had been falling. A better understanding of this effect is essential to reduce uncertainty in model predictions. |
Proceedings, The Asian Seas International Acoustics Experiment (ASIAEX) International Symposium, Chengdu, China, October 14-18, 2002 Tang, D., S.R. Ramp, P.H. Dahl, J. Lynch, J. Zhou, R. Zhang, C.-S. Chiu, R.C. Spindel, R.C., and J. Simmen, "Proceedings, The Asian Seas International Acoustics Experiment (ASIAEX) International Symposium, Chengdu, China, October 14-18, 2002," APL-UW TR 0201, December 2002. |
30 Dec 2002 |
On scattering from a bubble located near a flat airwater interface: Laboratory measurements and modeling Kapodistrias, G., and P.H. Dahl, "On scattering from a bubble located near a flat airwater interface: Laboratory measurements and modeling," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 110, 1271-1281, 2001. |
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1 Sep 2001 |
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Scattering by a single bubble near a flat airwater interface is investigated theoretically and experimentally. A ray-acoustic interpretation is used to describe the four scattering paths, from source to bubble to receiver, that determine the response of the bubble. Multiple scattering effects are accounted for using a closed-form solution derived from the multiple scattering series. Experiments are performed by placing a bubble with radius a ≈ 425 µm on a fine nylon thread, which is approximately 100 µm in diameter and practically transparent to sound, at a distance d from the interface. The primary variable is d and it ranges from 1a to 100a. The bubble is excited by tone bursts with a center frequency of 120 kHz, with the transducers arranged in both bistatic and monostatic configurations. Theory and experiment are in good agreement, verifying the dominant effect of the four paths in the response of the bubble, with multiple scattering playing a role for kd<1, where k is the wave number of the medium. In the long-range limit our simulations agree with those of Ye and Feuillade [J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 102, 798-805 (1997)] including the shifting of the bubble's resonant frequency. The dependence of scattering on transducer arrangement, range to bubble, grazing angle, and phase relation among the four paths, vis-à-vis monostatic and bistatic scattering, is discussed. |
ASIAEX, East China Sea: Cruise Report of the Activities of the R/V Melville 29 May to 9 June 2001 Dahl, P.H., "ASIAEX, East China Sea: Cruise Report of the Activities of the R/V Melville 29 May to 9 June 2001," APL-UW TM 7-01, July 2001. |
1 Jul 2001 |
Bubble clouds and their transport within the surf zone as measured with a distributed array of upward-looking sonars Dahl, P.H., "Bubble clouds and their transport within the surf zone as measured with a distributed array of upward-looking sonars," J. Acoust. Soc. Am, 109, 133-142, 2001. |
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1 Jan 2001 |
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A collaborative, multi-institute experiment called the Scripps Pier Experiment was conducted in the vicinity of the Scripps pier in La Jolla, California, in March 1997 to study the fate of bubbles in the surf zone and the effects of these bubbles on acoustic propagation. This paper discusses data gathered by the Applied Physics Laboratory, University of Washington, using a set of four upward-looking sonars (frequency 240 kHz), which simultaneously measured vertical profiles of acoustic volume scattering from bubbles at four locations. The transport of bubbles via rip currents emerged as an important, though episodic and localized, feature of the acoustic environment in the surf zone. Images of volumetric backscattering strength vs time and depth reveal the episodic events (of increased scattering level) lasting between 5 and 10 min caused by the passage of bubble clouds over the sonar. Time lags for the onset of increased scattering at the four locations are consistent with a seaward velocity of the bubble clouds of order 10 cm/s, and the length scales of these bubble clouds in the seaward direction are inferred to be in the range 50100 m. The influence of the incoming surface wave field is also discussed. |
High-frequency forward scattering from the sea surface: The characteristic scales of time and angle spreading Dahl, P.H., "High-frequency forward scattering from the sea surface: The characteristic scales of time and angle spreading," IEEE J. Ocean. Eng., 26, 141-151, 2001. |
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1 Jan 2001 |
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Forward scattering from the sea surface is discussed in the contest of a forward bounce path, or channel, through which high-frequency sound energy is transmitted. Such a channel might be used in an underwater communication or imaging task. Both time and angle spreading are inherent to the process of forward scattering by a roughened sea surface. Spreading in each domain relates, via Fourier transform, to a conjugate or coherence separation variable, e.g., angle spreading and spatial coherence. The measurement and modeling of time and angle spreading are discussed, with the modeling incorporating the bistatic cross section of the sea surface. A characteristic scale for each spread variable is defined: L for the time spread and αΘh and αΘv for the horizontal and vertical angular spread, respectively. Simplified expressions for these characteristic scales as a function of array acquisition geometry and sea surface conditions are also obtained. Data from two field experiments are discussed, one conducted in shallow waters of 30-m depth, and one conducted in deep, pelagic waters of 4000-m depth. Both experiments utilized frequencies =20 kHz. The role of bubbles in forward scattering is illustrated using measurements from the deep-water experiment. It was demonstrated that bubbles can attenuate the forward-scattered signal, but otherwise have little effect on L and αΘh,v until their concentrations approach those necessary to nearly extinguish the signal scattered from the air/sea interface. |
Overview of SAX99: Environmental considerations Richardson, M.D., et al., including P.H. Dahl, D. Tang, and E.I. Thorsos, "Overview of SAX99: Environmental considerations," IEEE J. Ocean. Eng., 26, 26-53. |
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1 Jan 2001 |
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A 1-km2 area located 2 km off the Florida Panhandle (30°22.6'N; 86°38.7'W) was selected as the site to conduct high-frequency acoustic seafloor penetration, sediment propagation, and bottom scattering experiments. Side scan, multibeam, and normal incidence chirp acoustic surveys as well as subsequent video surveys, diver observations, and vibra coring, indicate a uniform distribution of surficial and subbottom seafloor characteristics within the area. The site, in 1819 m of water, is characterized by 12-m-thick fine-to-medium clean sand and meets the logistic and scientific requirements specified for the acoustic experiments. This paper provides a preliminary summary of the meteorological, oceanographic, and seafloor conditions found during the experiments and describes the important physical and biological processes that control the spatial distribution and temporal changes in these characteristics. |
Monostatic and bistatic scattering by a single bubble near a pressure release interface: Laboratory measurements and modeling Kapodistrias, G., and P.H. Dahl, "Monostatic and bistatic scattering by a single bubble near a pressure release interface: Laboratory measurements and modeling," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 108, 2545, 2000. |
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1 Nov 2000 |
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Scattering by a single bubble near a flat pressure release interface is investigated theoretically and experimentally. A ray-acoustic interpretation is used to describe the four scattering paths, from source to bubble to receiver. Multiple scattering effects are accounted for using a closed-form solution derived from the multiple scattering series. A bubble with radius a≅425μm is placed on a fine nylon thread, which is practically transparent to sound, at a distance dB from the interface. The primary variable is dB and it ranges from 1a to 100a. Experiments are performed at a frequency of 120 kHz with the transducers arranged in both bistatic and monostatic configuration. Theory and experiment are in excellent agreement, verifying the dominant effect of the four paths in the response of the bubble, with multiple scattering playing a role for kdB<1, where k is the wave number of the medium. In the long-range limit our simulations agree with those of Ye and Feuillade [J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 102, 798-805 (1997)] including the shifting of the bubble's resonant frequency. The dependence of scattering on transducer arrangement, range to bubble, grazing angle, and phase relation among the four paths, vis-à-vis monostatic and bistatic scattering, are discussed. |
On bubble-mediated scattering from the sea surface: Modeling, field, and laboratory experiments Dahl, P.H., "On bubble-mediated scattering from the sea surface: Modeling, field, and laboratory experiments," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 108, 2492, 2000. |
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1 Nov 2000 |
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Bubbles, located just below the airsea interface, contribute significantly to the observed level of acoustic scattering originating from the sea surface, in contrast, for example, to microwave scattering. Typically, such bubbles are the result of breaking wind-generated waves, and thus their concentration is closely linked to wind speed. In this paper we discuss scattering from bubbles located within the proximity of the sea surface, with emphasis on the effects of the nearby reflecting surface, which gives rise to multiple paths from source to bubble to receiver. The effects of scattering geometry, e.g., as in bistatic forward scattering and monostatic backscattering, are illustrated using field data taken at a frequency of 30 kHz. An interpretive model for the contribution of near-surface bubbles to the apparent scattering cross section per unit area of sea surface is also discussed. This model has both a monostatic and a bistatic form, and, somewhat paradoxically, the bistatic form does not reduce to the monostatic form in the limit of source and receiver co-location. The issue is clarified, however, by examining the constituent pressures associated with the multiple paths, and by well-controlled laboratory measurements that include rough surface effects. These confirm both monostatic and bistatic forms of the model. |
The Environmental Acoustics of Two Alaskan Rivers and Its Relation to Salmon Counting Sonars Dahl, P.H., H.J. Geiger, D. Hart, J.J. Dawson, S.V. Johnston, and D.J. Degan, "The Environmental Acoustics of Two Alaskan Rivers and Its Relation to Salmon Counting Sonars," APL-UW TR 2001, August 2000. |
1 Aug 2000 |
Effects of interaction between two bubble scatterers Kapodistrias, G., and P.H. Dahl, "Effects of interaction between two bubble scatterers," J. Acoust Soc. Am., 107, 3006-3017, 2000. |
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1 Jun 2000 |
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The backscattering of sound from two regularly arranged bubbles is studied theoretically and experimentally. In well-controlled laboratory experiments a bistatic acoustic system is used to interrogate the scatterers, which are placed on a very fine thread at the same distance d from the combined beam axis of the set of transmitting and receiving transducers. The radius of each bubble is 585 μm. The frequency range is 80140 kHz, and d is varied so that the variable kd spans the range 0.221, where k is the acoustic wave number. Scattering calculations are carried out using an exact, closed-form solution derived from the multiple scattering series. Several experiments are performed, and the results are in close agreement with the calculations. It is verified that multiple scattering induces an oscillatory behavior about the exact coherent scattering level, with decreasing amplitude for increasing kd. For interbubble distance 2d ≈ λ/2 the backscattered radiation is maximized, while for 2d<λ/2 the radiation is reduced considerably. These and other effects are discussed. |
In The News
A room where sound goes to die and scientists go to study The Seattle Times, Sandi Doughton Researchers to Central Washington University's anechoic chamber include acousticians Peter Dahl and David Dall'Osto. |
3 Jul 2017
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Chasing Noise Washington Sea Grant Sea Star Acoustical engineers show how seabed terrain affects sound waves and how marine construction can cost less and still protect marine mammals. |
25 Jul 2016
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Less bang, more bubbles Scientific American, Charles Q. Choi Light curtains of air may protect fish from the din of humans. The bubbles alone may not fully solve the problem. They may dampen sound traveling through the water from above, but about 10 percent of the noise from underwater pile driving would still get transmitted up from the seabed, says acoustician Peter Dahl of the University of Washington. |
1 Sep 2011
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Inventions
Pile with Sound Abatement Patent Number: 9,617,702 Peter Dahl, John Dardis II, Per Reinhall |
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Patent
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11 Apr 2017
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A noise-attenuating pile comprising a pile driving shoe, an outer tube that engages the pile driving shoe, and an inner member that extends through the outer tube and engages the pile driving shoe, wherein the pile is configured to be installed in sediment or other suitable material by driving the inner member with a pile driver, without directly impacting the outer tube, such that the radial outer tube is substantially insulated from the radial expansion waves generated by the pile driver impacting the inner member. In some piles, one of the inner member and the outer tube are removable after installation. In some piles, a seal is provided in a lower end of the channel defined between the inner member and the outer tube, which may be biodegradable, or may be an inflatable bladder, for example. |
Pile to Minimize Noise Transmission and Method of Pile Driving Patent Number: 8,622,658 Per G. Reinhall, Peter Dahl |
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Patent
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7 Jan 2014
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A pile and method for driving a pile includes a pile having a structural outer tube, and an inner member disposed generally concentrically with the outer tube. The outer tube and inner member are fixed to a driving shoe. The pile is constructed and driven such that the pile driver impacts only the inner member. The impact loads are transmitted to the driving shoe to drive the pile into the sediment, such that the outer tube is thereby pulled into the sediment. In a particular embodiment the outer tube is formed of steel, and the inner member also comprises a steel tube. In an alternative embodiment one or both of the inner member and the outer tube are formed of an alternative material, for example, concrete. In an embodiment, the outer tube has a recess that captures a flange on the inner member. In an embodiment the outer tube is attached to the inner member with an elastic spring. |