Distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) is a technique that measures strain changes along an optical fiber to distances of ∼100 km with a spatial sensitivity of tens of meters. In November 2021, 4 days of DAS data were collected on two cables of the Ocean Observatories Initiative Regional Cabled Array extending offshore central Oregon. Numerous 20 Hz fin whale calls, northeast Pacific blue whale A and B calls, and ship noises were recorded, highlighting the potential of DAS for monitoring the ocean. The data are publicly available to support studies to understand the sensitivity of submarine DAS for low-frequency acoustic monitoring.
more »
« less
Fiber‐Optic Observations of Internal Waves and Tides
Abstract Although typically used to measure dynamic strain from seismic and acoustic waves, Rayleigh‐based distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) is also sensitive to temperature, offering longer range and higher sensitivity to small temperature perturbations than conventional Raman‐based distributed temperature sensing. Here, we demonstrate that ocean‐bottom DAS can be employed to study internal wave and tide dynamics in the bottom boundary layer, a region of enhanced ocean mixing but scarce observations. First, we show temperature transients up to about 4 K from a power cable in the Strait of Gibraltar south of Spain, associated with passing trains of internal solitary waves in water depth <200 m. Second, we show the propagation of thermal fronts associated with the nonlinear internal tide on the near‐critical slope of the island of Gran Canaria, off the coast of West Africa, with perturbations up to about 2 K at 1‐km depth and 0.2 K at 2.5‐km depth. With spatial averaging, we also recover a signal proportional to the barotropic tidal pressure, including the lunar fortnightly variation. In addition to applications in observational physical oceanography, our results suggest that contemporary chirped‐pulse DAS possesses sufficient long‐period sensitivity for seafloor geodesy and tsunami monitoring if ocean temperature variations can be separated.
more »
« less
- Award ID(s):
- 1848166
- PAR ID:
- 10497454
- Publisher / Repository:
- AGU
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans
- Volume:
- 128
- Issue:
- 9
- ISSN:
- 2169-9275
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
More Like this
-
-
Tsunami wave observations far from the coast remain challenging due tothe logistics and cost of deploying and operating offshoreinstrumentation on a long-term basis with sufficient spatial coverageand density. Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) on submarine fiber opticcables now enables real-time seafloor strain observations over distancesexceeding 100 km at a relatively low cost. Here, we evaluate thepotential contribution of DAS to tsunami warning by assessingtheoretically the sensitivity required by a DAS instrument to recordtsunami waves. Our analysis includes signals due to two effects induced by thehydrostatic pressure perturbations arising from tsunami waves: thePoisson’s effect of the submarine cable and the compliance effect of theseafloor. It also includes the effect of seafloor shear stresses andtemperature transients induced by the horizontal fluid flow associatedwith tsunami waves. The analysis is supported by fully coupled 3-Dphysics-based simulations of earthquake rupture, seismo-acoustic wavesand tsunami wave propagation. The strains from seismo-acoustic waves andstatic deformation near the earthquake source are orders of magnitudelarger than the tsunami strain signal. We illustrate a data processingprocedure to discern the tsunami signal. With enhanced low-frequencysensitivity on DAS interrogators (strain sensitivity ≈2×10 at mHz frequencies), we find that, on seafloorcables located above or near the earthquake source area, tsunamis areexpected to be observable with a sufficient signal-to-noise ratio withina few minutes of the earthquake onset. These encouraging results pavethe way towards faster tsunami warning enabled by seafloor DAS.more » « less
-
Abstract Distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) on submarine fiber-optic cables is providing new observational insights into solid Earth processes and ocean dynamics. However, the availability of offshore dark fibers for long-term deployment remains limited. Simultaneous telecommunication and DAS operating at different wavelengths in the same fiber, termed optical multiplexing, offers one solution. In May 2024, we collected a four-day DAS dataset utilizing an L-band DAS interrogator and multiplexing on the submarine cables of the Ocean Observatory Initiative’s Regional Cabled Array offshore central Oregon. Our findings show that multiplexed DAS has no impact on communications and is unaffected by network traffic. Moreover, the quality of DAS data collected via multiplexing matches that of data obtained from dark fiber. With a machine-learning event detection workflow, we detect 31 T waves and the S wave of one regional earthquake, demonstrating the feasibility of continuous earthquake monitoring using the multiplexed offshore DAS. We also examine ocean waves and ocean-generated seismic noise. We note high-frequency seismic noise modulated by low-frequency ocean swell and hypothesize about its origins. The complete dataset is freely available.more » « less
-
Abstract The origin of microseisms—whether from deep‐ocean sources or coastal reflections—has been debated for decades. In this study, we use Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) and Ocean Bottom Seismometer data collected offshore Oregon to investigate microseisms sources across a range of frequency bands. Our results reveal a clear frequency dependence: high‐frequency (0.35–1.5 Hz) microseisms primarily originates near the coastline due to wind ocean waves, with minimal contribution from the deep ocean. In short‐period double frequency (SPDF, 0.2–0.35 Hz) microseisms, the source regions extend farther offshore and are increasingly influenced by deep‐ocean sources. Long‐period double frequency (LPDF, 0.1–0.2 Hz) microseisms are predominantly generated in the deep ocean. Furthermore, we find that microseisms generated by coastal reflections do not propagate into the deep ocean.more » « less
-
Geotechnical characterization of marine sediments remains an outstanding challenge for offshore energy development, including foundation design and site selection of wind turbines and offshore platforms. We demonstrate that passive distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) surveys offer a new solution for shallow offshore geotechnical investigation where seafloor power or communications cables with fiber-optic links are available. We analyze Scholte waves recorded by DAS on a 42 km power cable in the Belgian offshore area of the southern North Sea. Ambient noise crosscorrelations converge acceptably with just over one hour of data, permitting multimodal Scholte wave dispersion measurement and shear-wave velocity inversion along the cable. We identify anomalous off-axis Scholte wave arrivals in noise crosscorrelations at high frequencies. Using a simple passive source imaging approach, we associate these arrivals with individual wind turbines, which suggests they are generated by structural vibrations. While many technological barriers must be overcome before ocean-bottom DAS can be applied to global seismic monitoring in the deep oceans, high-frequency passive surveys for high-resolution geotechnical characterization and monitoring in coastal regions are easily achievable today.more » « less
An official website of the United States government

