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Sonar and Echolocation Hunter Layman Garrett George What is Sonar • A way of locating things underwater by emitting sound waves at either infrasonic or ultrasonic levels. • Sonar stands for Sound Navigation Ranging. • There are two types, Active and Passive. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dLjrqN2iRw Active Sonar • Active sonar transducers emit a signal or pulse of sound directly into water. If there is an object or some kind of obstruction, the sound reflects off the object and returns as an “echo.” • There is a lot that can be learned from this echo such as the distance of the object and the shape of it. Passive Sonar • Systems that use passive sonar focus on detecting noise from objects such as submarines or ships and animals. • Passive Sonar does not emit any sound itself, which actually has its advantages. • Practical for military ships and submarines not wanting to be found. • Multiple Passive devices may lead to triangulation of source of sound. Physics Behind Sonar • Property of waves: Reflection • The longer the distance the lower the frequency. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r0088hYF uws Multiple Uses • Sonar is used for detection of submarines and mines. • Depth detection. • Commercial fishing. • Overall communication at sea. • Also animals have the ability to use something similar to Sonar. What is Echolocation • Echolocation is the transmission of sound waves to locate objects • Used by whales, dolphins, bats, etc… How it works • Animals produce a sound wave and listen for the echo • The initial sound is very high-pitched • Humans usually cannot hear the echolocation sound Frequency • Bat calls range from 10,000Hz to 100,000Hz • Frequency used depends on what its being used to detect – Lower frequencies used for moths and other insects – Higher frequencies used for navigation Intensity • Echolocation calls range between 60dB-140dB • Bats use a higher intensity for hunting Call Duration • A single call can last from 0.2-100 milliseconds • Duration of the call decreases as the animal gets closer to the prey Fun Fact • Dolphins have demonstrated a remarkable ability to detect and identify objects through echolocation, even objects that are buried under the ocean floor. • The Navy has begun to train dolphins to detect buried items not identifiable by human sonar.