LAUSR.org creates dashboard-style pages of related content for over 1.5 million academic articles. Sign Up to like articles & get recommendations!

Experimental validation of models for prediction of marine pile driving sound

Photo by jrkorpa from unsplash

Various models for the underwater noise radiation due to marine pile driving are being developed worldwide, to predict the sound exposure of marine life during pile driving activities. However, experimental… Click to show full abstract

Various models for the underwater noise radiation due to marine pile driving are being developed worldwide, to predict the sound exposure of marine life during pile driving activities. However, experimental validation of these models is scarce, especially for larger distances. Recently, TNO has been provided with data from underwater noise measurements up to 65 km from the piling location, gathered during the construction of two wind farms in the Dutch North Sea. These measurement data have been compared with different modeling approaches, in which the sound source is either formulated as an equivalent point source, or as a axially symmetric finite element model of the pile including the surrounding water and sediment. Propagation over larger distances, with varying bathymetry, is modeled efficiently by either an incoherent adiabatic normal mode sum or a flux integral approach. Differences between simulation and measurement data are discussed in terms of sound exposure level and spectral content, which leads to more insight into the mechanisms of sound radiation and propagation that are relevant during marine piling activities. An overview is given of the merits, shortcomings, and possibilities for improvement of the models.Various models for the underwater noise radiation due to marine pile driving are being developed worldwide, to predict the sound exposure of marine life during pile driving activities. However, experimental validation of these models is scarce, especially for larger distances. Recently, TNO has been provided with data from underwater noise measurements up to 65 km from the piling location, gathered during the construction of two wind farms in the Dutch North Sea. These measurement data have been compared with different modeling approaches, in which the sound source is either formulated as an equivalent point source, or as a axially symmetric finite element model of the pile including the surrounding water and sediment. Propagation over larger distances, with varying bathymetry, is modeled efficiently by either an incoherent adiabatic normal mode sum or a flux integral approach. Differences between simulation and measurement data are discussed in terms of sound exposure level and spectral content, which le...

Keywords: marine; experimental validation; validation models; bathymetry; marine pile; pile driving

Journal Title: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
Year Published: 2017

Link to full text (if available)


Share on Social Media:                               Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!

Related content

More Information              News              Social Media              Video              Recommended



                Click one of the above tabs to view related content.