| Literature DB >> 33531541 |
Hiroyuki Matsumoto1, Eiichiro Araki2, Toshinori Kimura2, Gou Fujie2, Kazuya Shiraishi2, Takashi Tonegawa2, Koichiro Obana2, Ryuta Arai2, Yuka Kaiho2, Yasuyuki Nakamura2, Takashi Yokobiki2, Shuichi Kodaira2, Narumi Takahashi2,3, Robert Ellwood4, Victor Yartsev4, Martin Karrenbach4.
Abstract
A ship-based seismic survey was conducted close to a fiber-optic submarine cable, and 50 km-long distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) recordings with air-gun shots were obtained for the first time. We examine the acquired DAS dataset together with the co-located hydrophones to investigate the detection capability of underwater acoustic (hydroacoustic) signals. Here, we show the hydroacoustic signals identified by the DAS measurement characterizing in frequency-time space. The DAS measurement can be sensitive for hydroacoustic signals in a frequency range from [Formula: see text] to a few tens of Hz which is similar to the hydrophones. The observed phases of hydroacoustic signals are coherent within a few kilometers along the submarine cable, suggesting the DAS is suitable for applying correlation analysis using hydroacoustic signals. Although our study suggests that virtual sensor's self-noise of the present DAS measurement is relatively high compared to the conventional in-situ hydroacoustic sensors above a few Hz, the DAS identifies the ocean microseismic background noise along the entire submarine cable except for some cable sections de-coupled from the seafloor.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33531541 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-82093-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379