marine cable
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AIP Advances ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (8) ◽  
pp. 085023
Author(s):  
Wuhao Huang ◽  
Naiyi Li ◽  
Zhenpeng Zhang ◽  
Hao Hu ◽  
Xiaoming Huang ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Feng Cheng ◽  
Benxin Chi ◽  
Nathaniel J. Lindsey ◽  
T. Craig Dawe ◽  
Jonathan B. Ajo-Franklin

AbstractThe sparsity of permanent seismic instrumentation in marine environments often limits the availability of subsea information on geohazards, including active fault systems, in both time and space. One sensing resource that provides observational access to the seafloor environment are existing networks of ocean bottom fiber optic cables; these cables, coupled to modern distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) systems, can provide dense arrays of broadband seismic observations capable of recording both seismic events and the ambient noise wavefield. Here, we report a marine DAS application which demonstrates the strength and limitation of this new technique on submarine structural characterization. Based on ambient noise DAS records on a 20 km section of a fiber optic cable offshore of Moss Landing, CA, in Monterey Bay, we extract Scholte waves from DAS ambient noise records using interferometry techniques and invert the resulting multimodal dispersion curves to recover a high resolution 2D shear-wave velocity image of the near seafloor sediments. We show for the first time that the migration of coherently scattered Scholte waves observed on DAS records can provide an approach for resolving sharp lateral contrasts in subsurface properties, particularly shallow faults and depositional features near the seafloor. Our results provide improved constraints on shallow submarine features in Monterey Bay, including fault zones and paleo-channel deposits, thus highlighting one of many possible geophysical uses of the marine cable network.


Energies ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (24) ◽  
pp. 4774
Author(s):  
Yulong Wang ◽  
Xiaohong Zhang ◽  
Lili Li ◽  
Jinyang Du ◽  
Junguo Gao

Based on the principle of operating an oil-filled-cable operation and the explanation of the oil-filling process provided in the cable operation and maintenance manual of submarine cables, this study investigated oil-pressure variation caused by gas generated as a result of cable faults. First, a set of oil-filled cables and their terminal oil-filled simulation system were designed in the laboratory, and a typical oil-filled-cable fault model was established according to the common faults of oil-filled cables observed in practice. Thereafter, ultrasonic signals of partial discharge (PD) under different fault models were obtained via validation experiments, which were performed by using oil-filled-cable simulation equipment. Subsequently, the ultrasonic signal mechanism was analyzed; these signals were generated via electric, thermal, and acoustic expansion and contraction, along with electric, mechanical, and acoustic electrostriction. Finally, upon processing the 400 experimental data groups, four practical parameters—maximum amplitude of the ultrasonic signal spectrum, Dmax, maximum frequency of the ultrasonic signals, fmax, average ultrasonic signal energy, Dav, and the ultrasonic signal amplitude coefficient, M—were designed to characterize the ultrasonic signals. These parameters can be used for subsequent pattern recognition. Thus, in this study, the terminal PD of an oil-filled marine cable was monitored.


2015 ◽  
Vol 81 (17) ◽  
pp. 6003-6011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nils Risgaard-Petersen ◽  
Michael Kristiansen ◽  
Rasmus B. Frederiksen ◽  
Anders Lindequist Dittmer ◽  
Jesper Tataru Bjerg ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTIn marine sediments cathodic oxygen reduction at the sediment surface can be coupled to anodic sulfide oxidation in deeper anoxic layers through electrical currents mediated by filamentous, multicellular bacteria of theDesulfobulbaceaefamily, the so-called cable bacteria. Until now, cable bacteria have only been reported from marine environments. In this study, we demonstrate that cable bacteria also occur in freshwater sediments. In a first step, homogenized sediment collected from the freshwater stream Giber Å, Denmark, was incubated in the laboratory. After 2 weeks, pH signatures and electric fields indicated electron transfer between vertically separated anodic and cathodic half-reactions. Fluorescencein situhybridization revealed the presence ofDesulfobulbaceaefilaments. In addition,in situmeasurements of oxygen, pH, and electric potential distributions in the waterlogged banks of Giber Å demonstrated the presence of distant electric redox coupling in naturally occurring freshwater sediment. At the same site, filamentousDesulfobulbaceaewith cable bacterium morphology were found to be present. Their 16S rRNA gene sequence placed them as a distinct sister group to the known marine cable bacteria, with the genusDesulfobulbusas the closest cultured lineage. The results of the present study indicate that electric currents mediated by cable bacteria could be important for the biogeochemistry in many more environments than anticipated thus far and suggest a common evolutionary origin of the cable phenotype withinDesulfobulbaceaewith subsequent diversification into a freshwater and a marine lineage.


2013 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 327-336 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nai-Chi Hsiao ◽  
Tzu-Wei Lin ◽  
Shu-Kun Hsu ◽  
Kai-Wei Kuo ◽  
Tzay-Chyn Shin ◽  
...  

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