Related Items
Encarta Search
Search Encarta about Sonar

Windows Live® Search Results

  • Sónar .::. Home .:

    Annual festival of progressive music and multimedia arts in Barcelona, Spain. Includes news, schedule, directions, ticket and accommodation information.

  • Sónar .::. Home .:

  • Sonar - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Sonar (which started as an acronym for sound navigation and ranging) is a technique that uses sound propagation (usually underwater) to navigate, communicate or to detect other ...

See all search results in
Windows Live® Search Results

Sonar

Encyclopedia Article
Multimedia
Robert BallardRobert Ballard

Sonar, acronym for SOund Navigation And Ranging, a detection system based on the reflection of underwater sound waves— just as radar is based on the reflection of radio waves in the air.

A typical sonar system emits ultrasonic pulses by using a submerged radiating device; it listens with a sensitive microphone, or hydrophone, for reflected pulses from potential obstacles or submarines.

Modern submarines rely on sonar for detecting the presence of enemy vessels. The most advanced system, called a towed array, uses a long cable to which hydrophones are attached. At sea, the submarine deploys this cable so that it trails far behind. Aircraft are used to deploy a different type of sonar. This system uses a device called a sonobuoy, consisting of a hydrophone mounted in a floating buoy. It is designed so that when a sound, such as that of a submarine engine, is picked up, the detector operates a small radio transmitter which sends out a signal that can be received by patrolling antisubmarine planes.

Spinoffs from the development of sonar technology, or ultrasonics, include acoustic oceanography, the study of ocean properties using a variety of acoustic means, and acoustic tomography, an imaging or remote sensing technique using computer analysis to study the data collected when acoustic signals are passed through an object. Acoustic tomography is used in oceanic and medical research and in medical diagnosis, as ultrasound.

Find in this article
View printer-friendly page
E-mail




© 2008 Microsoft