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Acoustic Positioning for Deep Sea Neutrino Telescopes with a System of Piezo Sensors Integrated into Glass Spheres

Authors :
Albert, A.
Alves, S.
André, M.
Ardid, M.
Ardid, S.
Aubert, J. -J.
Aublin, J.
Baret, B.
Basa, S.
Becherini, Y.
Belhorma, B.
Bendahman, M.
Benfenati, F.
Bertin, V.
Biagi, S.
Boumaaza, J.
Bouta, M.
Bouwhuis, M. C.
Brânzaş, H.
Bruijn, R.
Brunner, J.
Busto, J.
Caiffi, B.
Calvo, D.
Campion, S.
Capone, A.
Carenini, F.
Carr, J.
Carretero, V.
Celli, S.
Cerisy, L.
Chabab, M.
Moursli, R. Cherkaoui El
Chiarusi, T.
Circella, M.
Coelho, J. A. B.
Coleiro, A.
Coniglione, R.
Coyle, P.
Creusot, A.
Díaz, A. F.
De Martino, B.
Distefano, C.
Di Palma, I.
Donzaud, C.
Dornic, D.
Drouhin, D.
Eberl, T.
Eddymaoui, A.
van Eeden, T.
van Eijk, D.
Hedri, S. El
Khayati, N. El
Enzenhöfer, A.
Fermani, P.
Ferrara, G.
Filippini, F.
Fusco, L.
Gagliardini, S.
García, J.
Oliver, C. Gatius
Gay, P.
Geißelbrecht, N.
Glotin, H.
Gozzini, R.
Ruiz, R. Gracia
Graf, K.
Guidi, C.
Haegel, L.
van Haren, H.
Heijboer, A. J.
Hello, Y.
Hennig, L.
Hernández-Rey, J. J.
Hößl, J.
Huang, F.
Illuminati, G.
Jisse-Jung, B.
de Jong, M.
de Jong, P.
Kadler, M.
Kalekin, O.
Katz, U.
Kouchner, A.
Kreykenbohm, I.
Kulikovskiy, V.
Lahmann, R.
Lamoureux, M.
Lazo, A.
Lefèvre, D.
Leonora, E.
Levi, G.
Stum, S. Le
Loucatos, S.
Manczak, J.
Marcelin, M.
Margiotta, A.
Marinelli, A.
Martínez-Mora, J. A.
Migliozzi, P.
Moussa, A.
Muller, R.
Navas, S.
Nezri, E.
Fearraigh, B. Ó
Oukacha, E.
Păun, A.
Păvălaş, G. E.
Peña-Martínez, S.
Perrin-Terrin, M.
Piattelli, P.
Poirè, C.
Popa, V.
Pradier, T.
Randazzo, N.
Real, D.
Riccobene, G.
Romanov, A.
Sánchez-Losa, A.
Saina, A.
Greus, F. Salesa
Samtleben, D. F. E.
Sanguineti, M.
Sapienza, P.
Schüssler, F.
Seneca, J.
Spurio, M.
Stolarczyk, Th.
Taiuti, M.
Tayalati, Y.
Vallage, B.
Vannoye, G.
Van Elewyck, V.
Viola, S.
Vivolo, D.
Wilms, J.
Zavatarelli, S.
Zegarelli, A.
Zornoza, J. D.
Zúñiga, J.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Position calibration in the deep sea is typically done by means of acoustic multilateration using three or more acoustic emitters installed at known positions. Rather than using hydrophones as receivers that are exposed to the ambient pressure, the sound signals can be coupled to piezo ceramics glued to the inside of existing containers for electronics or measuring instruments of a deep sea infrastructure. The ANTARES neutrino telescope operated from 2006 until 2022 in the Mediterranean Sea at a depth exceeding 2000m. It comprised nearly 900 glass spheres with 432mm diameter and 15mm thickness, equipped with photomultiplier tubes to detect Cherenkov light from tracks of charged elementary particles. In an experimental setup within ANTARES, piezo sensors have been glued to the inside of such - otherwise empty - glass spheres. These sensors recorded signals from acoustic emitters with frequencies from 46545 to 60235Hz. Two waves propagating through the glass sphere are found as a result of the excitation by the waves in the water. These can be qualitatively associated with symmetric and asymmetric Lamb-like waves of zeroth order: a fast (early) one with $v_e \approx 5$mm/$\mu$s and a slow (late) one with $v_\ell \approx 2$mm/$\mu$s. Taking these findings into account improves the accuracy of the position calibration. The results can be transferred to the KM3NeT neutrino telescope, currently under construction at multiple sites in the Mediterranean Sea, for which the concept of piezo sensors glued to the inside of glass spheres has been adapted for monitoring the positions of the photomultiplier tubes.<br />Comment: submitted to "Experimental Astronomy"

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2405.07230
Document Type :
Working Paper