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Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale
31

Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

Dec 17, 2015

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Kathleen Perry
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Page 1: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

Communication With Waves: Sound

Cuvier’s Beaked Whale

Page 2: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

SoundWaves

A disturbance (i.e. pressure) that propagates energy by compressing and rarefacting the supporting medium like a spring.

compression

rarefaction

Amplitude, so

Wavelength, uo = 2so

=

Particle max. velocity:

Phase velocity:

= 2Angular velocity:

Page 3: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

uo

dE = ½ dMu2

Sound intensity (I) and Impedance (Z)1. Pressure p waves transmit energy, E

2. E per unit time Power (E/t = P)

3. Power per unit area Intensity [P/A = I]

I = dE/tA

I = ½uo2

Z = p = Zuo

Impedance, Z [kgm-2s-1]

Uo, pmax

¼

water

air

1.5 x 105

439

1.5 x 106

cochlea

Page 4: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

Impedance mismatching

Air: Z = = 439 kgm-2s-1

Water: Z = = 1.5 x 106 kgm-2s-1

99.97%

The same phenomenon applies when sound tries to go from air to water (i.e. hearing in terrestrial animals)

Page 5: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

Visualizing Sound

Spectrogram:Freq. vs. Time

Sonogram:Displacement

vs. Time

AcousticInfrasonic Ultrasonic

20Hz 20kHz Insects, bats, toothed whales, rodents, amphibians

Insects, baleen whales, elephants, moles

Humans, birds

Low High

Page 6: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

Intensity [Wm-2], Power per unit areaDecibels, dB = 10log(I / Iref)

Measured Intensity

Reference Intensity

(10-12 Wm-2)

0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180

Human pain threshold

Barely audible

Whisper (10x)

Conversation

Noisy Classroom

Transmission Loss, TL = 10log(Ia/ Ib)

a b

Page 7: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

Attenuation by absorption, scattering and spreading : energy lost

(dB

/m)

Geometrical spreading

Io ro2 = Ix rx

2

Inverse square law

Source I @ 1m

TL = 10log(Io/Ix)Transmission Loss in dB

Ia 12 = Ix rx2

Io /Ix = rx2

10log(Io /Ix) = 10log(rx2)

TL = 10log(rx)2

TL = 20log(rx)Absorption coefficient

TL = 20log(rx) + rx

Ref: Au, W. The Sonar of Dolphins, 1993

Combined effects

Page 8: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

Long distance communication:

= 0.0001 dB km-1

rX = 4532km

Io = 186 dB

= 20 Hz

Humpback

Blue Whale

TL = 20log(rx) + rx

= 0.0027 dB km-1

rX = 4532km

Io = 175 dB

= 100 Hz

Signal Received – Noise:Signal Produced:

Ix = 50 dB – 70 dB = -20 dB

Ix = 30 dB – 100 dB = -70 dB

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

200

0 1000000 2000000 3000000 4000000 5000000 6000000

Distance (m)

Io -

TL

(d

B)

Humpback

Blue Whale100

110

120

130

140

150

160

170

180

0 200 400 600 800 1000

Distance (m)

Io -

TL

(d

B)

Page 9: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

SOFAR Channel (SOund Fixing And Ranging)

Sound speed in water varies with temperature, salinity and pressure

Seawater T (c) & p (c) w/ depth:C (m/s)

Dep

th (

m) Sofar channel

@ 1000m

p. 254 text

Page 10: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

C (m/s)

Dep

th (

m)

Sofar

SOFAR Channel: a waveguideSound refracts towards slow region

1000

Sound generated within this channel can travel far

C (m/s)

Dep

th (

m)

1000

Sound generated near the sea surface will reflect off the sea

surface (impedance mismatch) and refract as it reaches greater depths

The sofar channel (1000m) is isolated from sea surface sounds (i.e. shipping noise) and is therefore relatively quiet.

Sofar

Page 11: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

SOFAR Channel is dependent on oceanic conditions

Page 12: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

Can aquatic animals use wave guides?

Blue whales only call at very shallow depths, and can probably only benefit from a shallow waveguide if one exists.

Olesen et al. 2007. MEPS

Page 13: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

evo1859!!

Do other wave guides exist?

Page 14: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

Can aquatic animals use wave guides?

Tyack, Johnson et al. 2006. J. Exp. Biol.

= 0.002 dB/m

= 40kHz

Io = 210dB re 1Pa

TL = 20log(rx) + rx

Page 15: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

Functionally blind dolphins

Indus River Dolphin

Bottlenose dolphin wearing suction cup blindfold

Page 16: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

Phonic Lips Sound Generation

1. Δp generated

2. Pressurized air passes phonic lips

3. Vibrations coupled to local fat bodies

4. Sound is reflected off bones and air spaces (impedance mismatching)

5. Sound focused anteriorly by the fatty melon

Page 17: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

Sound wave refraction determined by Snell’s Law

sinθ1/c1 = sinθ2/c2

-Low density, low velocity core-High density, high velocity shell

-Sound focusing organ-Impedance matching

Page 18: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

Harbor PorpoisePhocoena phocoena

Page 19: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

Sound Reception1. Sound hits window

Bottom View

Back View

3. Sound encounters bulla

4. Air sinuses provide reflection sites

2. Sound channeled by fat posteriorly

Page 20: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

Echolocating beaked whale

Hearing threshold may be: ~50 db (p.333 in text)

Beaked whale may only be able to detect prey several 100 m away

Probably no help from sofar b/c sound is attenuated so rapidly and signal is directional (concentrated)

= 0.002 dB/m = 40kHz

Io = 210dB re 1Pa

TL = 20log(rx) + rx

Lose .70I upon reflection

50

52

54

56

58

60

62

0 100 200 300 400 500

Distance (m)

Io -

TL

(d

B)

Page 21: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

Can baleen whales echolocate on prey?

x =

= /

= (1500ms-1)/(40Hz)

= 38m

x = 40mm

Echolocation not possible for prey, only

large land masses may be detected

Page 22: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

How do baleen whales make sound?

= (/2)(A/LV)

= (1500/2)(0.13m2/0.5m*1m3)

= 46 Hz

Page 23: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

Beaked whales and navy sonar• Gas-bubble lesions in stranded cetaceans.

Jepson et al., 2003 Nature.

Page 24: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

Family: ziphiidae (beaked whales)

Cuvier’s Beaked Whale

Northern Bottlenose Whale

Sowerby’s Beaked Whale

Page 25: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

Data on internal morphology needed

Page 26: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

3 Whales in a refrigerated truck

Destination: Largest CT Facility in the world at Hill Air Force Base, Salt lake City, UT

Page 27: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

Tubed whale goes here Each whale took about 2 days to scan

Hill Air Force Base, Salt lake City, UT

Page 28: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

2 Weeks later…

Page 29: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

Beaked whale

Dolphin Porpoise

Form, function and biodiversity…many models to come

Page 30: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.

The Namib Desert golden mole(Eremitalpa granti namibensis)

-Functionally blind

-Nocturnal Insectivore

-Massive malleus, confers low-frequency sensitivity, via the cochlea, to substrate vibrations.

Page 31: Communication With Waves: Sound Cuvier’s Beaked Whale.