Modern multibeam echo sounders (MBES), which are most widely used for collecting high-resolution bathymetry and seabed imagery, often have the capability of recording acoustic backscatter from the full water column. This capability has enabled several new applications for MBES including the study of marine organisms, the quantification of suspended sediments, imaging physical oceanographic structure, and the detection, localization, and characterization of methane gas seeps. Split-beam echo sounders (SBES) are widely used in fisheries applications, but have a similarly diverse range of other applications. Here, we review the use of both MBES and SBES systems for mapping different phenomena in the water column, with a focus on mapping methane gas seeps. In doing so, we attempt to highlight the many advantages of these systems, but also discuss some of the limitations including the masking of targets by high seafloor reverberation levels in MBES systems. We also discus some of the challenges associated with wide bandwidth SBES systems, including our attempts to maintain a frequency-independent field-of-view using constant-beamwidth transducers.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
May 2017
Meeting abstract. No PDF available.
May 01 2017
Mapping methane gas seeps with multibeam and split-beam echo sounders Free
Thomas C. Weber
Thomas C. Weber
Univ. of New Hampshire, 24 Colovos Rd., Durham, NH 03824, [email protected]
Search for other works by this author on:
Thomas C. Weber
Univ. of New Hampshire, 24 Colovos Rd., Durham, NH 03824, [email protected]
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 141, 3949 (2017)
Citation
Thomas C. Weber; Mapping methane gas seeps with multibeam and split-beam echo sounders. J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 1 May 2017; 141 (5_Supplement): 3949. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4988967
Download citation file:
Citing articles via
Focality of sound source placement by higher (ninth) order ambisonics and perceptual effects of spectral reproduction errors
Nima Zargarnezhad, Bruno Mesquita, et al.
A survey of sound source localization with deep learning methods
Pierre-Amaury Grumiaux, Srđan Kitić, et al.
Drawer-like tunable ventilated sound barrier
Yong Ge, Yi-jun Guan, et al.
Related Content
Acoustic Sensing of Gas Seeps in the Deep Ocean with Split-beam Echosounders
Proc. Mtgs. Acoust. (December 2012)
Experimental observations of acoustic backscattering from spherical and wobbly bubbles
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. (May 2017)
Acoustic and optical observations of methane gas seeps in the Gulf of Mexico
Proc. Mtgs. Acoust. (May 2013)
Acoustic and optical observations of methane gas seeps in the Gulf of Mexico
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. (May 2013)
Fate of methane gas bubbles emitted from the seafloor along the Western Atlantic Margin as observed by active sonar
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. (April 2015)