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November 4, 2010

Passive Acoustics. Brian Polagye, Chris Bassett, and Jim Thomson University of Washington Northwest National Marine Renewable Energy Center. New Environmental Technologies Renewable Ocean Energy and the Marine Environment. November 4, 2010. Need for New Environmental Technologies

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November 4, 2010

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  1. Passive Acoustics • Brian Polagye, Chris Bassett, and Jim Thomson • University of Washington • Northwest National Marine Renewable Energy Center • New Environmental Technologies • Renewable Ocean Energy and the Marine Environment November 4, 2010

  2. Need for New Environmental Technologies • Passive Acoustics • Introduction • Ambient Noise • Environmental Effects

  3. Marine Energy Development • Uncertainty around the potential environmental effects of marine energy poses a barrier to development • Consensus that well-monitored pilot projects are a first step in reducing environmental uncertainty Courtesy of Marine Current Turbines

  4. Pilot Monitoring: Wish List • Monitor the full range of potential stressor (e.g., noise) and receptor (e.g., marine mammal) interactions • Discriminate changes caused by marine energy pilot projects from large natural and anthropogenic variability • Robust, species specific identification • Provide information for decision making in real time • Monitor over a range of time scales (seconds to years) and length scales (cm to km)

  5. Pilot Monitoring: Reality • Resources are scarce and monitoring needs must be prioritized based on risk • Some interactions will not be measurable at the pilot scale • Conditions at marine energy sites preclude or complicate many conventional methods • Integrating multiple, rich data streams is a major software challenge

  6. Need for New Environmental Technologies • Passive Acoustics • Introduction • Ambient Noise • Environmental Effects

  7. Passive Acoustics • Broadband noise • Existing, ambient noise • Noise from marine energy projects • Marine mammal echolocation • Species specific • Presence or absence Mature Technology, New Applications

  8. Recording Hydrophone Loggerhead DSG • Deployments for three months at a time on seabed • Sample ambient noise • 1% duty cycle • 20 – 40,000 Hz

  9. Need for New Environmental Technologies • Passive Acoustics • Introduction • Ambient Noise • Environmental Effects

  10. Ambient Noise Sources

  11. Ambient Noise Characteristics

  12. Ambient Noise Variability What is the context for this variability?

  13. Establishing Context: Shipping f s f f f f s f f f f f f f Automatic Identification System (AIS)

  14. Establishing Context: Currents Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler (ADCP)

  15. Measuring Noise in Strong Currents • When currents exceed 1 m/s, elevated, broadband noise masks other sources • Two contributors to this increase • Propagating noise • Pseudo-noise and self-noise • When currents exceed 1 m/s, most hydrokinetic turbines begin to operate Bassett et al., Characteristics of underwater ambient noise at a proposed tidal energy site in Puget Sound, MTS/IEEE Oceans 2010, Seattle, WA, September 20-23.

  16. Need for New Environmental Technologies • Passive Acoustics • Introduction • Ambient Noise • Environmental Effects

  17. Source-specific Received Levels

  18. Evaluating Sound Transmission Loss Distance from source Source level at 1m RL = 179 – 18.4 log10(d) Received level Transmission loss coefficient

  19. Estimated Project Noise • Two turbines • Source level for each turbine = 160 dB re 1 µPa at 1 m • Sources are incoherent • Same transmission loss as noise from ferry 0.5 km 1.0 km

  20. Conclusions • Passive acoustics are a powerful tool for evaluating and monitoring acoustic effects of marine energy projects • Most effective when combined with additional tools to establish context

  21. Thank You • More information available at: • http://depts.washington.edu/nnmrec

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