side scan sonar introduction.pdf

37
23/10/2013 1 www.fugro.com © Fugro 2013 Side Scan Sonar Introduction Presenter’s Name Date www.fugro.com SIDESCAN APPLICATIONS: Pipeline Inspection Site Surveys Wreck Hunting Environmental & Sediment Classification ROV Operations Rig Move Operations www.fugro.com

Upload: andreea-savu

Post on 20-Feb-2016

260 views

Category:

Documents


5 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

1

www.fugro.com © Fugro 2013

Side Scan Sonar Introduction

Presenter’s Name

Date

www.fugro.com

SIDESCAN

APPLICATIONS:

•Pipeline Inspection

•Site Surveys

•Wreck Hunting

•Environmental & Sediment Classification

•ROV Operations

•Rig Move Operations

www.fugro.com

Page 2: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

2

www.fugro.com

Sidescan Systems

SeaMARC (I, II)

MR1 (SEAMAP)

TOBI

EDO

EG&G / EDGETECH

Klein

GLORIA

Seascan (MSTL)

GeoAcoustics

SSI, TAMU, Etc

AMS -120 (DSL)

Datasonics

Sonar Systems

Multi- Beam Systems

SIMRAD: EM300, 1000, 3000

HYDROSWEEP:Fansweep

SEABAT: 9001/8101/8102/8125

SEABEAM: Elac/XSE

Odom Echoscan

Interferometric Systems

AMS120 (Woods Hole DSL)

SeaMARC

Ultra Electronics Deepscan

*GeoDAS can be customized to support

any underwater sensor system.

www.fugro.com

•SONAR

•Sidescan data

•Beam-width

•Ping

•Towfish

•Waterfall

OVERVIEW OF TERMS

•Bottom-tracking

•Altitude

•Oscilloscope

•Slant Range

•Ground Range

•Imaging Artifacts

www.fugro.com

Overall view of sonar survey

Page 3: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

3

www.fugro.com

Overall view of sonar survey cont.

www.fugro.com

Introduction to Sonar

SONAR Sound Navigation And Ranging

~What Direction is the target and how far is it.

Early sonars returned single values for range to target,

Sidescan Sonar extends the beam of sound laterally, in a fan,

mapping a swath across the seafloor.

www.fugro.com

Recall: SONAR == SOund Navigation And Ranging

i.e., What direction is the target and how far is it

• What direction is the target?

Straight down, out to the side, or somewhere in between.

Without angle measurement, can only know range

• How far is the target? Distance = Rate * Time

Speed of Sound in Salt Water = VOS =~ 1500 meters / second

Function of pressure, temperature and salinity

Pulse Length = time (in milliseconds) in which the sonar is actively

transmitting energy

Ping Period = time (in seconds or milliseconds) in which the sonar

is listening for echoes before it pings again.

General Terms and Definitions

Page 4: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

4

www.fugro.com

Defining a Ping

Each firing of the sonar illuminates an

area on the seafloor - the echoes from

which we record, and call a “ping”.

The pulse- length and beam-width

define the sonar’s ability to resolve

items on the ground.

Shorter pulse lengths and narrower

beam patterns give higher resolution.

100% coverage requires that we go

slow, or ping fast, so that no gaps

occur between pings. This implies a

trade- off between survey speed, sonar

range and survey coverage.

www.fugro.com

Where is the sonar?

Hull mounted or in a “Towfish”.

Vessel position calculated from a DGPS (hopefully);

and sonar towfish position calculated relative to

vessel, via estimates of offsets, depth, cable-out

and relative bearing to ship (or USBL).

Sidescan “towfish”

Sonar Placement

www.fugro.com

Sonar Placement cont.

Here’s another perspective…

Page 5: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

5

www.fugro.com

Sidescan & Data Transfer

Lets begin with the sensor…

www.fugro.com

Next…

www.fugro.com

Then…

Page 6: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

6

www.fugro.com

Finally…

www.fugro.com

In a nutshell…

Each ping illuminates an area of the seafloor beneath and perpendicular to the

sensor - the backscatter from which we derive an image of a thin slice of the

seabed. This image is sent to a waterfall display, such as seen in GeoDAS, and

provides a continuous display of pings, forming a scrolling image of the

seafloor.

www.fugro.com

The waterfall display is what

appears on the computer

screen via a data acquisition

Software program such as

GeoDAS.

A waterfall display is used

to portray the recorded

sonar pings as a vertically

scrolling image of sequential

scan lines abutted to portray

a continuous image of the

bottom, optionally corrected

for vessel speed.

What is a “waterfall”?

Purpose of a Waterfall

Page 7: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

7

www.fugro.com

Bottom Tracking

The process of detecting the arrival time of the first echo from the bottom is known as

“bottom-tracking” and is mandatory for successful operations.

With an estimate of the sensor’s height above bottom, or altitude, and the assumption

that the bottom is nominally flat across-track within the coverage of the ping, we can

convert the raw time-domain (slant range) imagery of any target at point “P” to ground

range images, and represent the actual ground range to the target on the bottom, via

the Pythagorean’s Theorem.

What is “bottom-tracking”?

22GRSRGR

www.fugro.com

Detecting the first return, as shown by the black lines superimposed

on the raw data, gives us the sonar’s height off seafloor bottom also

know as “altitude”. GeoDAS uses its own built in oscilloscope to

detect this first return and begin bottom tracking which is important

to properly apply some of the image enhancement routines.

Oscilloscope

Sonar

echoes

(port and

starboard)

from one

“ping”

Detection of 1st

return gives alt.

www.fugro.com

Bottom Tracking

Given the speed of

sound in water, the

arrival time of each

acoustic backscatter

sample produces a

direct measure of the

range to the reflecting

target. This allows

GeoDAS to track the

seafloor bottom (this

will be discussed

further in the Playback

presentation).

Bottom-tracking is

indicated in GeoDAS

by the red lines in

the bottom-tracking

waterfall and in the

sidescan waterfall.

Bottom-tracking is most helpful in avoiding dredging…

Page 8: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

8

www.fugro.com

Slant - Range Imagery:

; A “raw” display of sonar data, object shapes may be distorted

Image without Bottom-Tracking Image with Bottom - Tracking applied

Ground - Range Imagery:

Requires knowledge of terrain, slope or the "flat - bottom assumption“

Slant-Range vs. Ground-Range

www.fugro.com

Uniformity of sidescan imagery is dependent on uniformity of illumination.

Major limits on uniformity are:

Spreading Losses:

Intensity (2R) = Intensity (R) / 4

(1 over R squared rule);

approximate, but reasonably close;

often estimated

Fix these with TVG

Beam -Pattern Variations

(side - lobes):

Illumination by sonar is not perfectly

even; can cause severe image

banding

Fix these with AVG

Imaging Artifacts

www.fugro.com

REVIEW

•SONAR: acronym for SOund Navigation And Ranging

•Sidescan data: arrive as time series (port & stbd) of echo amplitude

•Beam-width: footprint of the sonar ping on the ground, usually in

degrees.

•Ping: all the samples recorded from 1 active transmission

•Towfish: hydrodynamic towbody containing sonar electronics

•Waterfall: display of sequential pings as grayscale images

•Bottom-tracking: the process of detecting the first return (gives the

altitude)

•Altitude: the height of the sonar off the seabed

•Oscilloscope: backscatter sampled by sonar in 1/SAMPLE_RATE

•Slant Range: cross-track resolution is constant in time

•Ground Range: cross-track resolution is constant in space

•Image Artifacts: distortions in sonar data

Page 9: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

9

www.fugro.com

LIMITATIONS & ADVANTAGES

Disadvantages:

Cannot give geo-referenced bathymetry data

Difficult to position due to long cable

Semi-Skilled interpretation necessary

Advantages:

Low cost

large area coverage reduces survey time

Natural visual interpretation

Proven Technology

www.fugro.com

TOW FISH WITH DECK UNIT

www.fugro.com

Basic Sonar Principles

Page 10: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

10

www.fugro.com

SONAR SYSTEM ELEMENTS

www.fugro.com

TWO WAY TRAVEL TIME

www.fugro.com

SWATHE FROM SIDESCAN

Page 11: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

11

www.fugro.com

Side Scan Swath

www.fugro.com

Spherical Spreading of Sound

Spreading loss

When it hits the sea bottom or surface,

spreading becomes cylindrical

www.fugro.com

Absorption of sound

Vibrating molecules

Viscosity of medium

Chemical

Depends on Frequency of

Sound

High Frequency Sound

Low Frequency Sound

Page 12: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

12

www.fugro.com

Refraction of Sound

Bending of a sound wave

towards a region of slower

sound speed

Effects on imaging the

bottom

www.fugro.com

Reflection of Sound

Deflection of the path of a

sound wave by an object or

by the boundary between

two media

Acoustic properties of the

media boundaries…

Similar = less

reflection

Dissimilar = more

reflection

www.fugro.com

Scattering of Sound

Scattering affects the

distance sound can travel

Amount of scattering

depends on:

•Size of scatter

•Wave length of sound

Page 13: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

13

www.fugro.com

Traveling through the sea, an underwater sound signal becomes delayed, distorted and weakened, reflecting on boundaries of underside surface of waves, bottom and shores, bubbles, suspended particles and marine life.

Tide, current, temperature variances and wind also play on a sound's final quality.

Man made noise can also affect the results

Noise

www.fugro.com

Time Varying Gain

Time Varying Gain (TVG) is

accurately controlled

amplification (gain) relative

to time after transmission.

Used to correct for

transmission loss.

Time

Gain

www.fugro.com

Sonar Equation

EL = SL + TS - 2TL

Where EL (echo level) is the

level of the reflectedsound,

SL (source level) is the level

of the incident sound, TS is

target strength, and 2 TL is

two-way transmission loss

due to spreading and

absorption.

Page 14: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

14

www.fugro.com

SOURCE LEVEL

www.fugro.com

PULSE LENGTH

www.fugro.com

ACROSS TRACK RANGE

Page 15: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

15

www.fugro.com

ALONG TRACK RESOLUTION

www.fugro.com

HORIZONTAL BEAM PATTERN

www.fugro.com

VERTICAL BEAM PATTERN

Page 16: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

16

www.fugro.com

BEAM FORMATION

VP/frequency

www.fugro.com

NEAR FIELD BEAM FORMATION

VP/frequency Length of array

www.fugro.com

SPREADING, ABSORPTION AND NOISE

Page 17: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

17

www.fugro.com

TOWFISH IMAGE

www.fugro.com

SIDESCAN RECORD BUILD UP

www.fugro.com

CODA SYSTEM

Page 18: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

18

www.fugro.com

CODA PIPELINE

www.fugro.com

SIDESCAN GEOMETRY

A

B

C

D

www.fugro.com

A B

C

D

A= Surface echo

B = Bottom Echo

C = Target Echo

D = Shadow

Page 19: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

19

www.fugro.com

PADDLE STEAMER WRECK

www.fugro.com

ICEBERG SCOURS

www.fugro.com

MOSAIC

Page 20: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

20

www.fugro.com

FREQUENCY ALLOCATION

www.fugro.com

100kHZ WRECK

SCHOONER

www.fugro.com

100kHZ AIRCRAFT

WELLINGTON BOMBER

Page 21: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

21

www.fugro.com

500kHZ WRECK

LIGHTSHIP

www.fugro.com

PIPELINE CROSSING

www.fugro.com

MINE-HUNTING

Page 22: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

22

www.fugro.com

ENGINEERING

Steel rod protruding from

mound evident by its acoustic

shadow

Fill mound on previous sink

hole

www.fugro.com

BACKGROUND THRESHOLD

www.fugro.com

SEA SURFACE RETURN

Page 23: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

23

www.fugro.com

SURFACE INTERFERENCE

www.fugro.com

LOWERING TOW-FISH

www.fugro.com

WATCH OUT FOR THE BOTTOM!

Page 24: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

24

www.fugro.com

WATCH THE ECHO-SOUNDER

www.fugro.com

NO SURFACE RETURN

www.fugro.com

SEA CLUTTER

Page 25: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

25

www.fugro.com

PROJECTIONS & DEPRESSIONS

www.fugro.com

TARGET IN WATER COLUMN

www.fugro.com

TARGET IN WATER COLUMN

Page 26: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

26

www.fugro.com

TARGET ON BOTTOM

www.fugro.com

MULTIPLE ECHO’S

www.fugro.com

MULTIPLE PIPELINE ECHO’S

Pipeline

multiple Pipeline

multiple

Page 27: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

27

www.fugro.com

MULTIPLE SEA-BOTTOM

www.fugro.com

100kHZ WRECK

www.fugro.com

POWER BOAT WAKE

Page 28: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

28

www.fugro.com

SAIL BOAT WAKE

www.fugro.com

AIR BUBBLES

www.fugro.com

SHADOW FROM BUOY

Page 29: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

29

www.fugro.com

PIPELINE SUSPENSION

www.fugro.com

FISH

www.fugro.com

FISH SHOAL

Page 30: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

30

www.fugro.com

TARGET AT LONG AND SHORT RANGE

www.fugro.com

FIRST WRECK CONTACT

www.fugro.com

SECOND WRECK CONTACT

Page 31: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

31

www.fugro.com

TYRES ON SEA BED

www.fugro.com

WOODEN LADDER

www.fugro.com

MISTAKEN WRECK

Page 32: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

32

www.fugro.com

SIDE LOBE RETURNS

www.fugro.com

CROSSTALK AND DIRECT IMAGE

www.fugro.com

CROSSTALK

Page 33: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

33

www.fugro.com

SECOND SWEEP

www.fugro.com

SECOND SWEEP WRECK

www.fugro.com

REFRACTION PROBLEMS

SIDE SCAN SONAR

Page 34: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

34

www.fugro.com

REFRACTION IMAGE

TOTAL LOSS OF SIGNAL AT

THERMOCLINE

Focussing of beams

due to refraction

www.fugro.com

REFRACTION

www.fugro.com

TOWING PITCH

Page 35: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

35

www.fugro.com

TOWING PITCH

www.fugro.com

TOWFISH YAW

www.fugro.com

TOWFISH YAW

Page 36: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

36

www.fugro.com

SWEEPING TURN

www.fugro.com

DEVIATION FROM COURSE

www.fugro.com

DON’T DO THIS !

Page 37: Side Scan Sonar Introduction.pdf

23/10/2013

37

www.fugro.com

YOU CAN DO THIS

www.fugro.com

LOST TAIL FIN

www.fugro.com © Fugro 2013

Thank You