NNMREC April 20, 2011 Ambient Noise in Admiralty Inlet Chris Bassett, Brian Polagye, and Jim Thomson University of Washington Northwest National Marine.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
NNMREC Lyceum 2.0 February 16, 2011 Energy Futures of Puget Sound: Are Our Tides Part of the Solution? Brian Polagye, Jim Thomson, and Chris Bassett University.
Advertisements

NNMREC Work Session: Regional Developments in Marine Energy March 23, 2011 Northwest National Marine Renewable Energy Center Brian Polagye University of.
NNMREC Estimating the Acoustic Impact of a Tidal Energy Project Chris Bassett, Jim Thomson, and Brian Polagye University of Washington Mechanical Engineering.
Implications of Tidal Phasing for Power Generation at a Tidal Energy Site Brian Polagye and Jim Thomson Northwest National Marine Renewable Energy Center.
Piezoceramic Sensors and Infrasound Technology
Turbulent Mixing During an Admiralty Inlet Bottom Water Intrusion Philip Orton Hats off to the A-Team: Sally, Erin, Karin and Christie! Profs extraordinaire:
Contact: Merin Broudic Spatial variation of sediment/cobble motion noise Figure 1 highlights the background noise.
NNMREC Work Session: Regional Developments in Marine Energy March 23, 2011 Introduction to Marine Energy Brian Polagye University of Washington Northwest.
NNMREC Developing Capabilities for Tidal Hydrokinetic Blade Strike Monitoring Brian Polagye, Sharon Kramer, Sandra Parker- Stetter, and Jim Thomson Northwest.
NNMREC National Marine Renewable Energy Centers Hawaii National Marine Renewable Energy Center (HINMREC) University of Hawaii Wave, OTEC Southeast National.
NNMREC Behavioral Response of Harbor Porpoises to Vessel Noise in a Tidal Strait Ambient Noise and Marine Mammals May 23, 2011 Brian Polagye 1, Jason Wood.
NNMREC Arshiya Hoseyni Chime Advisor: Professor Phil Malte UW –NNMREC 04 November 2012.
Val Veirs Colorado College Colorado Springs, CO, Scott Veirs Beam Reach marine science and sustainability school Seattle, WA,
Model-based Estimation of Noise Impact Zones for Deep Offshore Seismic Surveys Alexander MacGillivray, Marie-Noël R. Matthews JASCO Applied Sciences,
Monitoring Processes at Sea using Underwater Sound Jeffrey Nystuen Marie Curie International Fellow Hellenic Center for Marine Research and Principal Oceanographer.
NNMREC November 5, 2010 Northwest National Marine Renewable Energy Center Standards and Protocols for Environmental Assessment Renewable Ocean Energy and.
NNMREC Summary for Congressman Dave Reichart April 22, 2011 Northwest National Marine Renewable Energy Center University of Washington
1 | Program Name or Ancillary Texteere.energy.gov Water Power Peer Review Puget Sound Pilot Tidal Energy Project (TRL 7/8) Dr. Brian Polagye (for Craig.
NNMREC Passive Acoustic Monitoring for Tidal Energy Projects Brian Polagye, Chris Bassett, and Jim Thomson University of Washington Northwest National.
Developing Monitoring Capabilities for Tidal Hydrokinetic Energy Installations Brian Polagye Northwest National Marine Renewable Energy Center University.
Introduction to Noise Control
Northwest National Marine Renewable Energy Center NW National Marine Renewable Energy Center University of Washington
Mountain Waves entering the Stratosphere. Mountain Waves entering the Stratosphere: New aircraft data analysis techniques from T-Rex Ronald B. Smith,
Northwest National Marine Renewable Energy Center Site Characterization of Tidal Resources: Admiralty Inlet Jeff Epler.
Listening to the Sound: Ambient Noise in Admiralty Inlet
Long-Term Ambient Noise Statistics in the Gulf of Mexico Mark A. Snyder & Peter A. Orlin Naval Oceanographic Office Stennis Space Center, MS Anthony I.
Urban Meteorology S. E. Belcher Department of Meteorology, University of Reading A. Agusti-Panareda, J. F. Barlow, M. J. Best, O. Coceal, S. L. Gray, I.
UNDERWATER ACOUSTİC. PROPELLER NOSİE SELİM YILMAZ ÖZGÜR SUBAŞI.
Northwest National Marine Renewable Energy Center Brian Polagye NW National Marine Renewable Energy Center Tidal Energy: Status and Trends Northwest Fisheries.
NNMREC November 4, 2010 Passive Acoustics New Environmental Technologies Renewable Ocean Energy and the Marine Environment Brian Polagye, Chris Bassett,
VESSEL NOISE AND ORCA VOCALIZATION: IMPLICATIONS FOR POLICY ALEXANDRA KOUGENTAKIS BEAM REACH FALL beamreach.org/071.
Page 1 5th meeting of GRB Informal Group ‘ASEP’ Potentials of exhaust systems with valves Filip Dörge.
Northwest National Marine Renewable Energy Center Brian Polagye NW National Marine Renewable Energy Center Tidal Hydrokinetic Energy Overview Western Energy.
Development of an Adaptable Monitoring Package for Marine Renewable Energy James Joslin, Edward Celkis, Chris Roper, Andrew Stewart, Brian Polagye Northwest.
Monitoring underwater sound at the Seattle Aquarium Research proposal discussion Wednesday, July 19, 2006 Scott Veirs | | (206)
1 | Program Name or Ancillary Texteere.energy.gov Water Power Peer Review Acoustic Effects of Hydrokinetic Tidal Turbines Dr. Brian Polagye University.
RADAR Detection of Extensive Air Showers Nils Scharf III. Physikalisches Institut A Bad Honnef Nils Scharf III. Physikalisches Institut A Bad.
Northwest National Marine Renewable Energy Center Presentation before Washington State House Committee on Technology, Energy, and Communications Northwest.
Northwest National Marine Renewable Energy Center In-stream Tidal Energy: NW National Marine Renewable Energy Center University of Washington
Development of an Adaptable Monitoring Package for Marine Renewable Energy Projects Part 2: Hydrodynamic Performance James Joslin, Brian Polagye, Andy.
Industrial Wind Farm Noise Thor Vandehei, PhD (Physics, UCSD) FLPA Finger Lakes Preservation Association.
Development of an Adaptable Monitoring Package for Marine Renewable Energy Projects Part 1: Conceptual Design and Operation Ben Rush, James Joslin, Andy.
Hydroacoustics ODOT Hydroacoustic Work Group Agreement on Thresholds Specifications Effects to fish Attenuation Monitoring and Reporting Information needs.
Underwater Vessel Noise in the Haro Strait Lindsay H. Robinson University of Puget Sound Intern with Beam Reach Marine Science and Sustainability School.
Control of a Helical Cross-flow Current Turbine
Sound Waves Vibration of a tuning fork
The traffic noise influence in the housing market A case study for Lisbon Sandra Vieira Gomes PhD in Civil Engineering 1 Escola Superior de Actividades.
Time (s) Angle (degrees) Pump via bottom reflection Pump via surface reflection Pump Drag head Underwater Anthropogenic.
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya Michel André MEUST: Real-time Monitoring of Noise and Acoustic Events in Cetacean Acoustic Niches.
Measurement of low-frequency underwater noise by a self-recording hydrophone Bong-Chae Kim, Hongsang Cho, Byoung-Nam Kim, Chang-Woong Shin, Donggoog Kim,
NEMO-O DE NEMO First results from the NEMO Test Site G. Riccobene, for the NEMO Collaboration The NEMO Collaboration is performing the Phase 1 of the project,
NREL is a national laboratory of the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy operated by the Alliance for Sustainable.
Investigating the Effect of Large Vessel Noise on Southern Resident Killer Whales Hilary B. Rollins UC Davis Beam Reach Marine Science and Sustainability.
ARENA08 Roma June 2008 Francesco Simeone (Francesco Simeone INFN Roma) Beam-forming and matched filter techniques.
Profiles of density fluctuations in frequency range of (20-110)kHz Core density fluctuations Parallel flow measured by CHERS Core Density Fluctuations.
Introduction to Noise Control Environmental Science Ithan B. Zimmer, Ph.D., P.E.
It’s All Noise Lee Hager, COHC 3M Lee Hager, COHC 3M © 3M All Rights Reserved.
Environmental Studies Program 1  The Studies Program functions to establish information needed for assessment and management of impacts from OCS exploration,
Sound Objectives: Characteristics of Sound Doppler Effect
Marine and Hydrokinetic Energy R&D from a National Perspective
Correlation between underwater noise level and AIS data in the Gulf of Catania (Sicily) Sara Pulvirenti Erice International School.
Brian Polagye & Paul Murphy Keith Bethune, Patrick Cross, & Luis Vega
Robert Lahmann VLVnT – Toulon – 24-April-2008
Sound Source Verification
Introduction of energy, including underwater noise, is at levels that do not adversely affect the marine environment Mark Tasker for TG11.
Integrated River Basin Management Tools and methods for IRBM Monitoring, Acquisition and processing of Water Resource Data.
University of Washington, Mechanical Engineering
Tidal Hydrokinetic Energy WW-ASME Dinner Meeting
Acoustics of the Puget Sound
Comparison of Wind Speed and Wind Stress to Ocean Ambient Sound
Presentation transcript:

NNMREC April 20, 2011 Ambient Noise in Admiralty Inlet Chris Bassett, Brian Polagye, and Jim Thomson University of Washington Northwest National Marine Renewable Energy Center NNMREC PI Update

NNMREC Recording Hydrophone Loggerhead DSG ParameterValue Sample Rate80 kHz Storage32 GB (Flash) Effective Sensitivity -165 dB re 1V/μPa Linear Response20 Hz – 40 kHz

NNMREC Ambient Noise Sources Bedload Transport Ship Average Conditions Quiet

NNMREC Ambient Noise Characteristics Cumulative Probability Density Hydrophone Deployments Temporal variability dominates over spatial variability

NNMREC Strong Currents Overnight Lull in Shipping First Run for Passenger Ferry Recording Hydrophone Automatic Identification System Doppler Profiler Establishing Context for Observations

NNMREC Vessel Traffic Monitoring with AIS  Automatic Identification System (AIS) transponders required on all vessels greater than 300 tonnes gross weight and passenger vessels  Continuous data collection and archiving

NNMREC Data Assimilation SPL (dB re 1 μPa) Distance to closest vessel (km) Vessel ProximityNoise Correlation Vessel noise drives broadband noise levels Source: Chris Bassett, forthcoming PhD dissertation

NNMREC Sound during High Currents Hydrophone Response Current Velocity

NNMREC Flow Shield Experiment Hydrophone with Flow Shield Unshielded Hydrophone Doppler Velocimeter Sample volume aligned with hydrophone element High Velocity Region Quiescent Region High Porosity Foam Hydrophone Element Hydrophone Pressure Case Source: Chris Bassett, forthcoming PhD dissertation

NNMREC Pseudo-Sound Identification Unshielded Hydrophone Hydrophone with Flow Shield Source: Chris Bassett, forthcoming PhD dissertation

NNMREC Propagating Sound during High Currents  Bedload transport ―Elevated noise at 5-50 kHz ―Consistent with size of gravel and shell hash observed during ROV surveys; O(1 cm)  Turbulent flow over rough surfaces ―Potential contribution from advected turbulence ―Cannot measure velocity fluctuations directly at frequencies of interest (e.g., > 300 Hz) (Hz) (Thorne, 1986) Source: Chris Bassett, forthcoming PhD dissertation

NNMREC Ambient Noise Summary  Ambient noise levels in Admiralty Inlet are high ―Mean broadband SPL ≈ 119 dB re 1 μPa (20 Hz – 30 kHz) ―Ambient noise exceeds NMFS marine mammal harassment threshold ≈50% of the time  Sound from shipping dominates ambient noise ―Will complicate turbine noise measurements  Measurements during strong currents are challenging ―Flow shields can significantly mitigate contamination by pseudo-sound ―Bedload transport likely contributes to high current noise budget

NNMREC Thank You This material is based upon work supported by the Department of Energy and Snohomish County PUD under Award Number DE and the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship.  Joe Talbert for keeping all equipment in working order.  Sam Gooch, Joe Graber, and Alex DeKlerk for helping turn around instrumentation.  Captain Andy Reay-Ellers for piloting skills during instrumentation deployment.