Distributed acoustic sensing for ocean applications
Angeliki Xenaki, Peter Gerstoft, Ethan Williams, and Shima Abadi

TL;DR
Distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) leverages fiber-optic cables to monitor underwater acoustic activity, offering a continuous, wide-coverage method for ocean monitoring with applications in detecting whales, ships, and earthquakes.
Contribution
This review summarizes recent advances in DAS technology, explains the physics behind it, and demonstrates its application in ocean soundscape monitoring using real data.
Findings
DAS can effectively detect marine mammals, ships, and seismic events.
Acquisition parameters significantly influence signal quality and detection capabilities.
DAS enables continuous, wide-area acoustic monitoring in ocean environments.
Abstract
Extensive monitoring of acoustic activities is important for many fields, including biology, security, oceanography, and Earth science. Distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) is an evolving technique for continuous, wide-coverage measurements of mechanical vibrations, which is suited to ocean applications. DAS illuminates an optical fiber with laser pulses and measures the backscattered wave due to small random variations in the refractive index of the material. External stimuli, such as mechanical strain due to acoustic wavefields impinging on the fiber-optic cable, modulate the backscattered wave. Continuous measurement of the backscattered signal provides a distributed sensing modality of the impinging wavefield. Considering the potential use of existing telecommunication fiber-optic cables deployed across the oceans, DAS has emerged as a promising technology for monitoring the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
