• Title/Summary/Keyword: Active sonar transmitting pulse

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A study on wideband underwater acoustic signal amplifier design for generating multi-frequency (다중 주파수 재생을 위한 광대역 수중 음향 신호 증폭기 설계 연구)

  • Lee, Dong-Hun;Yoo, Seung-Jin;Kim, Hyeong-Moon;Kim, Hyoung-Nam
    • The Journal of the Acoustical Society of Korea
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    • v.36 no.3
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    • pp.179-185
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    • 2017
  • The problem that occurred in the design/fabrication/testing of the wideband transmitting power amplifier for an embedded active SONAR (Sound Navigation and Ranging) system operating underwater was analyzed and the solution of the problem was proposed in this paper. Wideband acoustic SONAR systems had been developed in order to improve the underwater detection performance. The underwater acoustic transmission system had been also developed to achieve the wideband SONAR system. In this paper, the wideband acoustic transmission signal was generated using a 2 Level sawtooth type Class D PWM (Pulse Width Modulation) which was not complicated to implement. When the sonar signals having two or more frequencies were simultaneously generated, parasitic frequencies were added to the original signals by integer multiples of the frequency difference of the original signal. To cope with this problem, we proposed a way to remove the parasitic frequency from the source signal through modeling and simulation of the implemented power amplifier and PWM control hardware using MATLAB and Simulink.

Underwater object radial velocity estimation method using two different band hyperbolic frequency modulation pulses with opposite sweep directions and its performance analysis (두 대역 상반된 스윕방향 hyperbolic frequency modulation 펄스로 수중물체 시선속도추정 기법 및 성능분석)

  • Chomgun Cho;Euicheol Jeong
    • The Journal of the Acoustical Society of Korea
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    • v.42 no.1
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    • pp.25-31
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    • 2023
  • In order to estimate the radial speed of an underwater object so-called target with active sonar, Continuous Wave (CW) pulse is generally used, but if a target is slow and at near distance, it is not easy to estimate the radial velocity of the target due to acoustic reverberation in the ocean. In 2017, Wang et al. utilized broadband signal of two Hyperbolic Frequency Modulation (HFM) pulses, which is known as a doppler-invariant pulse, with equal frequency band and in opposite sweep directions to overcome this problem and successfully estimate the radial speed of slow-moving nearby target. They demonstrated the estimation of the radial velocity with computer simulation using the parameters of two HFM starting time differences and receiving times. However, for it uses two HFM pulses with equal frequency, cross-correlation between the two pulses negatively affect the detection performance. To mitigate this cross-correlation effect, we suggest using two different band HFM with the opposite sweep directions. In this paper, a method of radial velocity estimation is derived and simulated using two HFM pulses with the pulse length of 1 second and bandwidth of 400 Hz. Applying the suggested method, the radial velocity was estimated with approximately 6 % of relative error in the simulation.

High-resolution range and velocity estimation method based on generalized sinusoidal frequency modulation for high-speed underwater vehicle detection (고속 수중운동체 탐지를 위한 일반화된 사인파 주파수 변조 기반 고해상도 거리 및 속도 추정 기법)

  • Jinuk Park;Geunhwan Kim;Jongwon Seok;Jungpyo Hong
    • The Journal of the Acoustical Society of Korea
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    • v.42 no.4
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    • pp.320-328
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    • 2023
  • Underwater active target detection is vital for defense systems, requiring accurate detection and estimation of distance and velocity. Sequential transmission is necessary at each beam angle, but divided pulse length leads to range ambiguity. Multi-frequency transmission results in time-bandwidth product losses when bandwidth is divided. To overcome these problem, we propose a novel method using Generalized Sinusoidal Frequency Modulation (GSFM) for rapid target detection, enabling low-correlation pulses between subpulses without bandwidth division. The proposed method allows for rapid updates of the distance and velocity of target by employing GSFM with minimized pulse length. To evaluate our method, we simulated an underwater environment with reverberation. In the simulation, a linear frequency modulation of 0.05 s caused an average distance estimation error of 50 % and a velocity estimation error of 103 % due to limited frequency band. In contrast, GSFM accurately and quickly tracked targets with distance and velocity estimation errors of 10 % and 14 %, respectively, even with pulses of the same length. Furthermore, GSFM provided approximate azimuth information by transmitting highly orthogonal subpulses for each azimuth.