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Passive acoustic monitoring of bed load discharge in a large gravel bed river
Author(s) -
Geay T.,
Belleudy P.,
Gervaise C.,
Habersack H.,
Aigner J.,
Kreisler A.,
Seitz H.,
Laronne J. B.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: earth surface
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-9011
pISSN - 2169-9003
DOI - 10.1002/2016jf004112
Subject(s) - geophone , hydrophone , bed load , geology , acoustic sensor , temporal resolution , acoustics , acoustic emission , underwater , environmental science , remote sensing , hydrology (agriculture) , sediment transport , seismology , geotechnical engineering , sediment , geomorphology , oceanography , physics , quantum mechanics
Abstract Surrogate technologies to monitor bed load discharge have been developed to supplement and ultimately take over traditional direct methods. Our research deals with passive acoustic monitoring of bed load flux using a hydrophone continuously deployed near a river bed. This passive acoustic technology senses any acoustic waves propagated in the river environment and particularly the sound due to interparticle collisions emitted during bed load movement. A data set has been acquired in the large Alpine gravel‐bedded Drau River. Analysis of the short‐term frequency response of acoustic signals allows us to determine the origin of recorded noises and to consider their frequency variations. Results are compared with ancillary field data of water depth and bed load transport inferred from the signals of a geophone array. Hydrophone and geophone signals are well correlated. Thanks to the large network of deployed geophones, analysis of the spatial resolution of hydrophone measurements shows that the sensor is sensitive to bed load motion not only locally but over distances of 5–10 m (10–20% of river width). Our results are promising in terms of the potential use of hydrophones for monitoring bed load transport in large gravel bed rivers: acoustic signals represent a large river bed area, rather than being local; hydrophones can be installed in large floods; they can be deployed at a low cost and provide continuous monitoring at high temporal resolution.

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