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Infrasound direction of arrival determination using a balloon-borne aeroseismometer.

Daniel C BowmanJerry W RouseSiddharth KrishnamoorthyElizabeth A Silber
Published in: JASA express letters (2022)
Free-floating balloons are an emerging platform for infrasound recording, but they cannot host arrays sufficiently wide for multi-sensor acoustic direction finding techniques. Because infrasound waves are longitudinal, the balloon motion in response to acoustic loading can be used to determine the signal azimuth. This technique, called "aeroseismometry," permits sparse balloon-borne networks to geolocate acoustic sources. This is demonstrated by using an aeroseismometer on a stratospheric balloon to measure the direction of arrival of acoustic waves from successive ground chemical explosions. A geolocation algorithm adapted from hydroacoustics is then used to calculate the location of the explosions.
Keyphrases
  • machine learning
  • high throughput
  • deep learning
  • drinking water
  • cross sectional
  • neural network
  • high density
  • tandem mass spectrometry