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High Resolution Echo Sounders
and Acoustic Systems for Precision Seafloor Exploration |
office (401) 921-5170 fax (401) 921-5159 |
Sub-bottom
profiling systems identify and measure various marine sediment
layers that exist below the sediment/water interface. These acoustic
systems use a technique that is similar to single beam echo
sounders. A sound source emits an acoustic signal vertically
downwards into the water and a receiver monitors the return signal
that has been reflected off the seafloor. Some of the acoustic
signal will penetrate the seabed and be reflected when it encounters
a boundary between two layers that have different acoustic
impedance. The system uses this reflected energy to provide
information on sediment layers beneath the sediment-water interface.
Acoustic
impedance is related to the density of the material and the rate at
which sound travels through the material. When there is a change in
acoustic impedance, such as the water-sediment interface, part of
the transmitted sound is reflected. However, some of the sound
energy penetrates through the boundary and into the sediments. This
energy is reflected when it encounters boundaries between deeper
sediment layers having different acoustic impedance. The system uses
the energy reflected by these layers to create a profile of the
marine sediments.
Several sonar
parameters (output power, signal frequency, pulse length and
processing techniques) affect the instrument performance.
An increase in
output power gives better penetration into the marine sediments.
Sometimes however, if the bottom is very hard or not very deep, the
increase in power will cause more acoustic signal to be reflected
back off the seafloor. The signal might then be reflected off the
sea surface, leading to multiple reflections and unwanted "signal
noise" in the data.
Signal
frequency also has an effect on system performance. Absorption loss
in marine sediments is proportional to transmit frequency, with
higher frequencies having more signal loss as they travel thru the
sediments.
Longer sound
pulse length transmits more energy and yields deeper seabed
penetration. However, a long pulse length may decrease the ability
to discriminate between adjacent reflectors, thus decreasing the
system resolution.
CHIRP signal
processing can increase system performance by adding enhanced signal
to noise ratios and also by providing increased vertical sediment
layer resolution.
Sub-bottom
profiling systems can be useful for characterizing benthic habitats,
since they provide information about sub-surface sediment structure.
No other acoustic techniques provide this type of information, and
only physical sampling via cores will allow for characterization of
subsurface structures. Sub-bottom profiling systems may penetrate as
deep as 300 meters into the seafloor dependent on sediment type and
sonar characteristics, which is much deeper than most cores can
penetrate. However, the penetration depth depends on the hardness of
the overlying layers and the presence of gas deposits, such as
methane.
High-resolution
sub-bottom systems have been used to detect and measure the
thickness of dredged material deposits, detect hard substrate that
has been covered by sedimentation, identify buried objects (such as
cables and pipelines), and define the basement (or bedrock) layer
for potential confined aquatic disposal sites for dredged material.
Data can be displayed in various 2D and 3D formats such as is
accomplished by
SonarWiz+SBP.

