Crows are highly intelligent and social creatures. Each night during the non-breeding period, they gather on large pre-roost aggregations as they move towards their communal roost where they sleep. Crows make numerous and varied vocalizations on these pre-roost aggregations, but the purpose of these calls, and vocal communication in general, in these pre-roost aggregations is not fully understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMarine seismic reflection surveys use airguns to generate repetitive high energy sound signals to image the structure of the seafloor. To better mitigate against the impact of airgun pulses on marine mammals, safety criteria are defined to ensure marine mammals are not exposed to high levels of acoustic energy. Accurate prediction of the sound received levels away from the airguns is required for conducting effective marine mammal monitoring.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBeamforming includes a variety of spatial filtering techniques that may be used for determining sound source locations from near-field sensor array recordings. For this scenario, beamforming resolution depends on the acoustic frequency, array geometry, and target location. Random scattering in the medium between the source and the array may degrade beamforming resolution with higher frequencies being more susceptible to degradation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn order to mitigate against possible impacts of seismic surveys on baleen whales it is important to know as much as possible about the presence of whales within the vicinity of seismic operations. This study expands on previous work that analyzes single seismic streamer data to locate nearby calling baleen whales with a grid search method that utilizes the propagation angles and relative arrival times of received signals along the streamer. Three dimensional seismic reflection surveys use multiple towed hydrophone arrays for imaging the structure beneath the seafloor, providing an opportunity to significantly improve the uncertainty associated with streamer-generated call locations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMarine seismic surveys are under increasing scrutiny because of concern that they may disturb or otherwise harm marine mammals and impede their communications. Most of the energy from seismic surveys is low frequency, so concerns are particularly focused on baleen whales. Extensive mitigation efforts accompany seismic surveys, including visual and acoustic monitoring, but the possibility remains that not all animals in an area can be observed and located.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper presents the performance of three methods for estimating the range of broadband (50-500 Hz) bowhead whale calls in a nominally 55-m-deep waveguide: Conventional mode filtering (CMF), synthetic time reversal (STR), and triangulation. The first two methods use a linear vertical array to exploit dispersive propagation effects in the underwater sound channel. The triangulation technique used here, while requiring no knowledge about the propagation environment, relies on a distributed array of directional autonomous seafloor acoustics recorders (DASARs) arranged in triangular grid with 7 km spacing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Acoust Soc Am
November 2012
Synthetic time reversal (STR) is a technique for blind deconvolution of receiving-array recordings of sound from an unknown source in an unknown multipath environment. It relies on generic features of multipath sound propagation. In prior studies, the pivotal ingredient for STR, an estimate of the source-signal's phase (as a function of frequency ω), was generated from conventional beamforming of the received-signal Fourier transforms, P(j)(ω), 1 ≤ j ≤ N, where N is the number of array elements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSynthetic time reversal (STR) is a technique for blind deconvolution in an unknown multipath environment that relies on generic features (rays or modes) of multipath sound propagation. This paper describes how ray-based STR signal estimates may be improved and how ray-based STR sound-channel impulse-response estimates may be exploited for approximate source localization in underwater environments. Findings are based on simulations and underwater experiments involving source-array ranges from 100 m to 1 km in 60 -m-deep water and chirp signals with a bandwidth of 1.
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