DocumentCode :
2550966
Title :
FishMASS: what can you do with a little bandwidth when you are watching fish?
Author :
Gordon, Lee ; Zedel, Len
Author_Institution :
RD Instrum., San Diego, CA, USA
fYear :
1998
fDate :
35951
Firstpage :
42552
Lastpage :
42555
Abstract :
FishMASS (Fish Monitoring Acoustic Sensing System) is an NSF-funded project designed to adapt broadband acoustic Doppler current profiling (ADCP) technology to split-beam fisheries sonar. ADCPs use Doppler methods to observe ocean current profiles, and split-beam sonars locate targets within well-calibrated beams to determine target strength, and indirectly, fish size distributions. Combined ADCP/split-beam sonars would have the obvious advantage of enabling a split-beam sonar to measure a component of a fish´s velocity. It turns out that broadband signal processing, now standard in ADCPs, offers other less-obvious benefits too. Wide acoustic bandwidth enables more precise single-ping echo intensity measurements and better separation of closely-spaced targets and it provides information about the echo spectrum. This paper reviews these new capabilities and describes a prototype FishMASS system now being used for laboratory and field investigations
Keywords :
oceanographic equipment; ADCP; Doppler method; Fish Monitoring Acoustic Sensing System; FishMASS; broadband acoustic Doppler current profiling; broadband signal processing; closely-spaced targets; echo spectrum; fish size; single-ping echo intensity measurements; split-beam fisheries sonar; split-beam sonar; wide acoustic bandwidth;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
iet
Conference_Titel :
Recent Advances in Sonar Applied to Biological Oceanography (Ref. No. 1998/227), IEE Colloquium on
Conference_Location :
London
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1049/ic:19980186
Filename :
709528
Link To Document :
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