Title of article
The detection by sonar of difficult targets (including centimetre-scale plastic objects and optical fibres) buried in saturated sediment
Author/Authors
T.G. Leighton، نويسنده , , R.C.P. Evans، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
26
From page
438
To page
463
Abstract
This paper reports on a laboratory study into the use of sonar to detect objects, two of which exhibit a poor acoustic impedance mismatch with the water-saturated sediment in which they are buried to depth of about 30 cm. The targets are solid cylinders having diameters of 20–25 mm and 50 cm length, made of polyethylene, of telecommunications optical fibre, and of steel. Steel spheres are included for comparison. A poor acoustic impedance mismatch between the target and the host sediment is one factor that can make buried targets difficult to detect with sonar, but such detection is increasingly becoming an issue in a range of applications from archaeology to defence to telecommunications. Attention is paid to those signal processing techniques which could be of potential benefit. For this range of test objects, comparisons are made between use of optimal filtering and synthetic aperture sonar. In addition, the potential of a range of acousto-optical effects (optical time domain reflectometry, Raman and Brillouin scattering, and fibre optic hydrophones) is assessed in the for the particular application of detecting non-metallised fibre optic telecommunications cables. A web page dedicated to this paper hosts movies and reports at .
Keywords
Plastic target , Sonar , sediment , Optical fibre , Seabed
Journal title
Applied Acoustics
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Applied Acoustics
Record number
1171040
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