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A Virtual-Beacon-Based Calibration Method for Precise Acoustic Positioning of Deep-Sea Sensing Networks

The rapid expansion of deep-sea sensing networks underscores the critical need for accurate underwater positioning of observation base stations. However, achieving precise acoustic localization, particularly at depths exceeding 4 km,… Click to show full abstract

The rapid expansion of deep-sea sensing networks underscores the critical need for accurate underwater positioning of observation base stations. However, achieving precise acoustic localization, particularly at depths exceeding 4 km, remains a significant challenge due to systematic ranging errors, clock drift, and inaccuracies in sound speed modeling. This study proposes and validates a three-tier calibration framework consisting of a Dynamic Single-Difference (DSD) solver, a geometrically optimized reference buoy selection algorithm, and a Virtual Beacon (VB) depth inversion method based on sound speed profiles. Through simulations under varying noise conditions, the DSD method effectively mitigates common ranging and clock errors. The geometric reference optimization algorithm enhances the selection of optimal buoy layouts and reference points. At a depth of 4 km, the VB method improves vertical positioning accuracy by 15% compared to the DSD method alone, and nearly doubles vertical accuracy compared to traditional non-differential approaches. This research demonstrates that deep-sea underwater target calibration can be achieved without high-precision time synchronization and in the presence of fixed ranging errors. The proposed framework has the potential to lower technological barriers for large-scale deep-sea network deployments and provides a robust foundation for autonomous deep-sea exploration.

Keywords: deep sea; calibration; method; sea; sensing networks; sea sensing

Journal Title: Journal of Marine Science and Engineering
Year Published: 2025

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