DocumentCode
407494
Title
Origins of directionality in snapping shrimp sounds and its potential applications
Author
Chitre, Mandar ; Beng, Koay Teong ; Potter, John
Author_Institution
Acoustic Res. Lab., Nat. Univ. of Singapore, Singapore
Volume
2
fYear
2003
fDate
22-26 Sept. 2003
Firstpage
889
Abstract
Snapping shrimp (genera Alpheus, Synalpheus & Penaeus) sounds are known to dominate high frequency ambient noise in warm shallow waters with a peak-to-peak source levels of up to 190 dB re 1uPa @ 1m. It has been previously shown that these loud sounds are primarily due to the collapse of cavitation bubbles resulting from the ejection of a highspeed jet of water generated by the high-speed closure of the snapping shrimp claw. As the cavitation bubble is small, it is expected to behave as an omni-directional source. However, since snapping shrimp live on or very close to the sea bed, the source and the bottom reflection of the source form a quasi-dipole. The interference between the direct arrival from the source and the closely-spaced bottom-reflected arrival creates directionality. The observed directionality of the snapping shrimp sound is a function of the bottom parameters, because of their influence on the reflected component of the quasi-dipole. Since the shrimp are distributed over a wide portion of the seabed, the directionality resulting from many different arrival angles may be used for geoacoustic inversion at a single receiving location, yielding estimates of superficial bottom parameters such as sound speed from a single receiver station deployment and without introducing deterministic sources. The Acoustic Research Laboratory (ARL) at the Tropical Marine Science Institute of Singapore has developed a compact, high-bandwidth, 3-dimensional acoustic array that can localise these sources in time and space. Data from experimental deployments of this system provides evidence for the directionality of snapping shrimp sound.
Keywords
oceanographic techniques; underwater sound; Acoustic Research Laboratory; Alpheus genus; Penaeus genus; Synalpheus genus; Tropical Marine Science Institute of Singapore; bottom parameter; cavitation bubble collapse; closely-spaced bottom-reflected arrival; deterministic source; directionality; geoacoustic inversion; high frequency ambient noise; high-bandwidth 3D acoustic array; highspeed jet ejection; omni-directional source; peak-to-peak source level; quasi-dipole; sea bed; single receiving location; snapping shrimp claw; snapping shrimp sound; sound speed; source bottom reflection; source direct arrival; superficial bottom parameter; warm shallow water; Acoustic noise; Acoustic reflection; Direction of arrival estimation; Frequency; Geoacoustic inversion; Interference; Laboratories; Noise level; Water resources; Yield estimation;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
OCEANS 2003. Proceedings
Conference_Location
San Diego, CA, USA
Print_ISBN
0-933957-30-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/OCEANS.2003.178442
Filename
1283401
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