DocumentCode
392869
Title
Application of the Acoustic Integration Model (AIM) to predict and minimize environmental impacts
Author
Frankel, Adam S. ; Ellison, William T. ; Buchanan, Jacquin
Author_Institution
Marine Acoust., Inc., Arlington, VA, USA
Volume
3
fYear
2002
fDate
29-31 Oct. 2002
Firstpage
1438
Abstract
Minimizing and mitigating the potential effect of sound upon the environment is an increasing concern for many activities. Naval operations, seismic exploration, vessel and aircraft operations, and scientific investigations now need to consider the potential effect of underwater acoustic sources. Marine mammals are usually the primary concern, due to their widespread distribution and excellent hearing. Predicting the exposure of marine mammals is complicated by their diving behavior, which causes them to ´sample´ many depth strata within the water column. Acoustic propagation and sound received levels are a function of depth as well as range. The Acoustic Integration Model (AIM) addresses this specific complication. A principal component of the central engine of AIM is a movement simulator. Both sound sources and animals, collectively addressed as ´ANIMATS´, are programmed to move in location and depth over time in a realistic function. Animal movement is based on documented regional and seasonal behavioral data for each species generated. Acoustic sources and receivers are programmed to move through a virtual acoustic environment based on external environmental databases and radiated sound fields created from a choice of several propagation models. The integration component of the AIM engine then predicts the exposure level of each simulated animal at successive operator-selected time steps. Furthermore, each animat can evaluate its environment at each time step, and can be programmed to alter direction or diving behavior in response to any variable, such as sound level or sea depth. The model therefore allows the user to predict the effects of different operational scenarios and animal response levels, thereby allowing the selection of the alternative that produces the least impact and still meets operation requirements.
Keywords
acoustic field; environmental factors; noise pollution; oceanographic techniques; underwater acoustic propagation; AIM; Acoustic Integration Model; acoustic propagation models; aircraft operations; animal movement; animal response levels; animats; diving behavior; environmental databases; environmental impact minimization; environmental impact prediction; hearing; marine mammals; movement simulator; noise pollution; sea depth; seismic exploration; sound field radiation; sound potential effect; sound received levels; underwater acoustic sources; vessel operations; water column; water depth strata; Acoustic applications; Acoustic propagation; Aircraft; Animals; Animation; Auditory system; Databases; Engines; Predictive models; Underwater acoustics;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
OCEANS '02 MTS/IEEE
Print_ISBN
0-7803-7534-3
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/OCEANS.2002.1191849
Filename
1191849
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