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A sonobuoy -short for sonar-buoy- is a relatively small expendable
sonar system that is dropped from military aircraft performing
anti-submarine warfare. The buoys are ejected from aircraft
in canisters and deploy upon water impact. An infatable surface
float with a radio transmitter rises to the surface for communication
with the aircraft, while hydrophone(s) sensors and stabilizing
equipment descend below the surface to a depth that is variable
depending on environmental conditions and the search pattern.
The buoy relays acoustic information from its hydrophone(s)
via radio frequency to operators onboard the aircraft.
History: searching the seas
Sonobuoys were invented during World War II to help locate
and track submarines. Since the oceans are so large, and Navy
vessels so few, sonobuoys were introduced to conduct broad
searches cheaply and quickly. The Maritime Patrol Aircraft
(MPA) also known patrol planes, drop sonobuoys by the dozens
over tens of nautical miles and can secure large areas at
a time, in remote regions of the oceans. The Cold War motivated
significant improvements and development of different sonobuoy
types. The technology has developed from a simple passive
hydrophone attached to a radio transmitter with battery monitored
aurally by a human operator, to complex systems with active
sonar capability, multiple hydrophones arranged in arrays,
on-board signal processing and more.
Concept of Operation
Sonobuoys extend the Navy fleet sonar capabilities out from
the vessels to distances an aircraft can cover.
Buoys are deployed on the surface in patterns
to allow precise location by triangulation. Sometimes the
pattern takes the shape of a grid or other array formation
and complex signal processing is used to transcend the capabilities
of single hydrophones.
There are several different kinds of sonobuoys,
with one major distinction being active sonar or passive sonar.
Other air deployed sensors include bathythermograph,
which provides temperature and thermal gradient information
of the water column, also communication devices for transmitting
information to friendly submarines.
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