Abstract
Acoustic daylight imaging is a new technique that has been
proposed for creating pictorial images of objects in the ocean from
the ensonification provided by the incident ambient noise field. To
investigate the feasibility of the technique, a series of
experiments was performed from the research platform ORB, moored in
San Diego Bay, Southern California. Central to these experiments
was an acoustic receiver known as ADONIS (acoustic daylight ocean
noise imaging system), which consists of a spherical reflector, 3 m
in diameter, with an elliptical array of 130 hydrophones at the
focal surface. This system, which is broadband, operating between 8
and 80 kHz, forms a total of 126 receive-only beams spanning the
vertical and horizontal. The ambient noise power in each beam is
mapped into a pixel on a VDU. Various types of targets were used in
the experiments, including planar panels and cylindrical,
polyethylene drums containing wet sand, seawater or syntactic foam
(essentially air), and most of the experiments were conducted with
the targets at ranges between 20 and 40 m. At the time of the
experiments the noise field in the area was created primarily by
snapping shrimp. Moving, color images of the object space were
successfully created with ADONIS. Some representative static images
from the moving sequences are presented and discussed in the
paper.
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