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Dive into the research topics where Rex K. Andrew is active.

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Featured researches published by Rex K. Andrew.


Acoustics Research Letters Online-arlo | 2002

Ocean ambient sound: Comparing the 1960s with the 1990s for a receiver off the California coast

Rex K. Andrew; Bruce M. Howe; James A. Mercer; Matthew A. Dzieciuch

Ocean ambient sound data from 1994 to 2001 have been collected using a receiver on the continental slope off Point Sur, California. A temporary, nearby receiving array was used for calibration purposes. The resulting data set is compared with long-term averages of earlier measurements made with the identical receiver over the period from 1963 to 1965. This comparison shows that the 1994 to 2001 levels exceed the 1963 to 1965 levels by about 10 dB between 20 and 80 Hz and between 200 and 300 Hz, and about 3 dB at 100 Hz. Increases in (distant) shipping sound levels may account for this.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2012

The North Pacific Acoustic Laboratory deep-water acoustic propagation experiments in the Philippine Sea

Peter F. Worcester; Matthew A. Dzieciuch; James A. Mercer; Rex K. Andrew; Brian D. Dushaw; Arthur B. Baggeroer; Kevin D. Heaney; Gerald L. D'Spain; John A. Colosi; Ralph A. Stephen; John N. Kemp; Bruce M. Howe; Lora J. Van Uffelen; Kathleen E. Wage

A series of experiments conducted in the Philippine Sea during 2009-2011 investigated deep-water acoustic propagation and ambient noise in this oceanographically and geologically complex region: (i) the 2009 North Pacific Acoustic Laboratory (NPAL) Pilot Study/Engineering Test, (ii) the 2010-2011 NPAL Philippine Sea Experiment, and (iii) the Ocean Bottom Seismometer Augmentation of the 2010-2011 NPAL Philippine Sea Experiment. The experimental goals included (a) understanding the impacts of fronts, eddies, and internal tides on acoustic propagation, (b) determining whether acoustic methods, together with other measurements and ocean modeling, can yield estimates of the time-evolving ocean state useful for making improved acoustic predictions, (c) improving our understanding of the physics of scattering by internal waves and spice, (d) characterizing the depth dependence and temporal variability of ambient noise, and (e) understanding the relationship between the acoustic field in the water column and the seismic field in the seafloor. In these experiments, moored and ship-suspended low-frequency acoustic sources transmitted to a newly developed distributed vertical line array receiver capable of spanning the water column in the deep ocean. The acoustic transmissions and ambient noise were also recorded by a towed hydrophone array, by acoustic Seagliders, and by ocean bottom seismometers.


Annual Review of Marine Science | 2014

Sounds in the Ocean at 1–100 Hz

William S. D. Wilcock; Kathleen M. Stafford; Rex K. Andrew; Robert I. Odom

Very-low-frequency sounds between 1 and 100 Hz propagate large distances in the ocean sound channel. Weather conditions, earthquakes, marine mammals, and anthropogenic activities influence sound levels in this band. Weather-related sounds result from interactions between waves, bubbles entrained by breaking waves, and the deformation of sea ice. Earthquakes generate sound in geologically active regions, and earthquake T waves propagate throughout the oceans. Blue and fin whales generate long bouts of sounds near 20 Hz that can dominate regional ambient noise levels seasonally. Anthropogenic sound sources include ship propellers, energy extraction, and seismic air guns and have been growing steadily. The increasing availability of long-term records of ocean sound will provide new opportunities for a deeper understanding of natural and anthropogenic sound sources and potential interactions between them.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2004

Transverse horizontal spatial coherence of deep arrivals at megameter ranges

Rex K. Andrew; Bruce M. Howe; James A. Mercer

Predictions of transverse horizontal spatial coherence from path integral theory are compared with measurements for two ranges between 2000 and 3000 km. The measurements derive from a low-frequency (75 Hz) bottom-mounted source at depth 810 m near Kauai that transmitted m-sequence signals over several years to two bottom-mounted horizontal line arrays in the North Pacific. In this paper we consider the early arriving portion of the deep acoustic field at these arrays. Horizontal coherence length estimates, on the order of 400 m, show good agreement with lengths calculated from theory. These lengths correspond to about 1° in horizontal arrival angle variability using a simple, extended, spatially incoherent source model. Estimates of scintillation index, log-amplitude variance, and decibel intensity variance indicate that the fields were partially saturated. There was no significant seasonal variability in these measures. The scintillation index predictions agree quite well with the dataset estimates; nevertheless, the scattering regime predictions (fully saturated) vary from the regime classification (partially saturated) inferred from observation. This contradictory result suggests that a fuller characterization of scattering regime metrics may be required.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2014

Diversity-based acoustic communication with a glider in deep water

H. C. Song; Bruce M. Howe; Michael G. Brown; Rex K. Andrew

The primary use of underwater gliders is to collect oceanographic data within the water column and periodically relay the data at the surface via a satellite connection. In summer 2006, a Seaglider equipped with an acoustic recording system received transmissions from a broadband acoustic source centered at 75 Hz deployed on the bottom off Kauai, Hawaii, while moving away from the source at ranges up to ∼200 km in deep water and diving up to 1000-m depth. The transmitted signal was an m-sequence that can be treated as a binary-phase shift-keying communication signal. In this letter multiple receptions are exploited (i.e., diversity combining) to demonstrate the feasibility of using the glider as a mobile communication gateway.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2013

Wavefront intensity statistics for 284-Hz broadband transmissions to 107-km range in the Philippine Sea: Observations and modeling

Andrew W. White; Rex K. Andrew; James A. Mercer; Peter F. Worcester; Matthew A. Dzieciuch; John A. Colosi

In the spring of 2009, broadband transmissions from a ship-suspended source with a 284-Hz center frequency were received on a moored and navigated vertical array of hydrophones over a range of 107 km in the Philippine Sea. During a 60-h period over 19,000 transmissions were carried out. The observed wavefront arrival structure reveals four distinct purely refracted acoustic paths: One with a single upper turning point near 80 m depth, two with a pair of upper turning points at a depth of roughly 300 m, and one with three upper turning points at 420 m. Individual path intensity, defined as the absolute square of the center frequency Fourier component for that arrival, was estimated over the 60-h duration and used to compute scintillation index and log-intensity variance. Monte Carlo parabolic equation simulations using internal-wave induced sound speed perturbations obeying the Garrett-Munk internal-wave energy spectrum were in agreement with measured data for the three deeper-turning paths but differed by as much as a factor of four for the near surface-interacting path.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2013

Weakly dispersive modal pulse propagation in the North Pacific Ocean

Ilya A. Udovydchenkov; Michael G. Brown; Timothy F. Duda; Peter F. Worcester; Matthew A. Dzieciuch; James A. Mercer; Rex K. Andrew; Bruce M. Howe; John A. Colosi

The propagation of weakly dispersive modal pulses is investigated using data collected during the 2004 long-range ocean acoustic propagation experiment (LOAPEX). Weakly dispersive modal pulses are characterized by weak dispersion- and scattering-induced pulse broadening; such modal pulses experience minimal propagation-induced distortion and are thus well suited to communications applications. In the LOAPEX environment modes 1, 2, and 3 are approximately weakly dispersive. Using LOAPEX observations it is shown that, by extracting the energy carried by a weakly dispersive modal pulse, a transmitted communications signal can be recovered without performing channel equalization at ranges as long as 500 km; at that range a majority of mode 1 receptions have bit error rates (BERs) less than 10%, and 6.5% of mode 1 receptions have no errors. BERs are estimated for low order modes and compared with measurements of signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and modal pulse spread. Generally, it is observed that larger modal pulse spread and lower SNR result in larger BERs.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2013

Observations and transport theory analysis of low frequency, acoustic mode propagation in the Eastern North Pacific Ocean.

Tarun K. Chandrayadula; John A. Colosi; Peter F. Worcester; Matthew A. Dzieciuch; James A. Mercer; Rex K. Andrew; Bruce M. Howe

Second order mode statistics as a function of range and source depth are presented from the Long Range Ocean Acoustic Propagation EXperiment (LOAPEX). During LOAPEX, low frequency broadband signals were transmitted from a ship-suspended source to a mode-resolving vertical line array. Over a one-month period, the ship occupied seven stations from 50 km to 3200 km distance from the receiver. At each station broadband transmissions were performed at a near-axial depth of 800 m and an off-axial depth of 350 m. Center frequencies at these two depths were 75 Hz and 68 Hz, respectively. Estimates of observed mean mode energy, cross mode coherence, and temporal coherence are compared with predictions from modal transport theory, utilizing the Garrett-Munk internal wave spectrum. In estimating the acoustic observables, there were challenges including low signal to noise ratio, corrections for source motion, and small sample sizes. The experimental observations agree with theoretical predictions within experimental uncertainty.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2012

Bottom interacting sound at 50 km range in a deep ocean environment

Ilya A. Udovydchenkov; Ralph A. Stephen; Timothy F. Duda; S. Thompson Bolmer; Peter F. Worcester; Matthew A. Dzieciuch; James A. Mercer; Rex K. Andrew; Bruce M. Howe

Data collected during the 2004 Long-range Ocean Acoustic Propagation Experiment provide absolute intensities and travel times of acoustic pulses at ranges varying from 50 to 3200 km. In this paper a subset of these data is analyzed, focusing on the effects of seafloor reflections at the shortest transmission range of approximately 50 km. At this range bottom-reflected (BR) and surface-reflected, bottom-reflected energy interferes with refracted arrivals. For a finite vertical receiving array spanning the sound channel axis, a high mode number energy in the BR arrivals aliases into low mode numbers because of the vertical spacing between hydrophones. Therefore, knowledge of the BR paths is necessary to fully understand even low mode number processes. Acoustic modeling using the parabolic equation method shows that inclusion of range-dependent bathymetry is necessary to get an acceptable model-data fit. The bottom is modeled as a fluid layer without rigidity, without three dimensional effects, and without scattering from wavelength-scale features. Nonetheless, a good model-data fit is obtained for sub-bottom properties estimated from the data.


ieee international conference on information technology and applications in biomedicine | 1998

Wavelet compression of ultrasound video streams for teleradiology

Rex K. Andrew; Brent K. Stewart; Steven G. Langer; Keith C. Stegbauer

Future developments in teleradiology hinge on the delivery of real or near real-time images, sometimes across less than optimal bandwidth communication channels. Ultrasound, to achieve its greatest diagnostic value, needs to transmit not just still images but video as well. A significant amount of compression, however, may be required to achieve near real-time video across limited bandwidths. This will inevitably result in degraded video quality. A variety of compression algorithms are in widespread use including H.261, H.323, JPEG (Joint Photographic Experts Group), MPEG (Motion Picture Expert Group) and most recently wavelets. We have developed a suite of tools to evaluate each of these methods, and to identify potential areas where wavelet compression may have an advantage. In this particular study, we compare motion wavelet compression to motion JPEG compression using the standard correlation coefficient and the normalized mean squared error, and found the motion wavelet technique slightly better.

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Bruce M. Howe

University of Hawaii at Manoa

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John A. Colosi

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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Ralph A. Stephen

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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S. Thompson Bolmer

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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