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Sonardyne
Wideband Technology
Introduction
A key design requirement
for GPS was that transmitted signals were ‘covert’
in so much that they could only be detected by users equipped
with dedicated receivers. This is achieved in the GPS system
by using signals that are modulated with binary codes. GPS
receivers contain replicas of the codes transmitted by individual
satellites which are compared with the received satellite
signals. These are converted from analogue to digital format
and compared with the replica using a correlation function.
This modulation technique is also used to transfer a considerable
volume of additional information to the user such as satellite
status and orbit predictions.
The processing power required
to perform signal processing and code correlation in these
early receivers meant that the units were bulky and power-hungry.
Recent advances in high-speed digital computer technology
and the increasing application of digital signal processing
in mass applications like mobile telephony have driven the
development of small, low power consumption Digital Signal
Processors (DSP).
Tone Burst vs. Wideband
The majority of acoustic
positioning systems used for subsea positioning over the
last 30 years were developed using analogue electrical circuits
and simple pulsed narrowband continuous wave signals. These
‘tone burst’ systems are fundamentally limited
in terms of the number of unique operating channels. They
are also subject to ‘fade’ and lack resolution
in reverberant environments where multiple signals may arrive
at a receiver within a short time interval. In a tone burst
system optimal ranging precision requires the use of very
high frequencies and short pulses which are subject to greater
attenuation, lack power and hence have a limited operating
range. The simplicity of the signal architecture limits
range resolution as this is determined by the transmission
bandwidth. Range resolution is thus effectively noise limited
as the signals lack bandwidth and power.
Timing resolution
using Tone Burst and Wideband signals
 
(Above) Tone Burst Signal: Coarse resolution
of filter response to uncoded signal is more susceptible
to degradation by noise
(Above Right) Wideband
Signal: Code correlation function results in far greater
precision and resistance to noise
In a wideband system the
signal spectrum is spread such that the frequency bandwidth
is greater than the information rate. One way that this
spreading can be achieved is through the use of binary code
sequences, as in GPS. In this manner the transmitted signal
occupies a greater bandwidth than the message it conveys
and the transmission appears as a wide band of frequencies
as opposed to a signal on a discrete carrier. The wideband
system is able to make many more unique signals or channels
available to the user than the narrowband system. In this
respect it is similar to terrestrial digital television
which can provide many more channels than the “analogue”
systems using the same available bandwidth. It is possible
to operate 10 or more “coded” wideband channels
and a tone channel using the same “tone” or
carrier frequency. Using the correct signal processing it
is perfectly possible for them to co-exist. As well as having
superior ranging precision than a tone burst equivalent
the wideband system can resolve signal paths in time according
to the inverse of the bandwidth and is also less affected
by noise. A wideband signal can have a long duration and
hence contain a large amount of energy to mitigate noise
at the receiver but it still retains bandwidth.
Sonardyne has developed
the Fusion range of flexible modern hardware platforms that
use Digital Signal Processing technology to support both
traditional “tone burst” and wideband signals.
This equipment has been extensively operated over the last
two years in an extreme range of environments from the icy
waters of the Grand Banks to the straits of Singapore and
the immense pressures of deepwater West Africa and the Gulf
of Mexico . Fusion transponders and transceivers are fully
backwardly compatible and support new functionality through
software upgrades.
Benefits of Sonardyne
Wideband Technology
High accuracy positioning
Deep water oil field developments
require highly accurate seabed positioning that can often
only be achieved using Long BaseLine (LBL) acoustic positioning
techniques. The limitations of tone burst signals meant
that obtaining the highest positional accuracy in the last
generation of LBL equipment required the use of the Extra
High Frequency band. The use of EHF systems in water depths
in excess of about 500 metres is complicated by the fact
that it is not possible to range to seabed transponders
from a surface vessel due to the attenuation of the high
frequency signals. Even if it were possible to receive the
signals a separate, dedicated transceiver would be required
since the transponders operate outside the Medium Frequency
band employed by the majority of USBL systems. The increased
ranging precision offered by Wideband signals means that
it is possible to obtain positional accuracies at MF that
were previously obtainable only at EHF. This has the combined
benefits of extending the range of high accuracy positioning
and rationalising equipment inventories.
Results from deep
water field trials December 2004
 
(Above) Baseline measurement
between MF Compatts using wideband signals indicates 1cm
precision over 780m range.
(Above Right) MF Compatt 5 units were deployed in seabed
stands in 1300m water depth
High speed robust
telemetry
A key benefit of wideband
technology lies in its application to telemetry where tone
burst systems offer limited scope for optimisation. Sonardyne
has developed a proprietory robust high speed wideband telemetry
scheme that is specifically designed for the real-time transfer
of the relatively short data packets that are commonly associated
with subsea navigation. In addition to being 10 times faster
than the fastest tone burst telemetry scheme the robust
wideband link incorporates forward error correction and
all of the recognised benefits associated with correlation
signal processing in terms of immunity to noise and multipath.
In contrast to the schemes employed in many acoustic modem
products it does not require the overhead of a training
sequence which reduces the latency associated with the data.
This makes it more appropriate to real-time monitoring applications
such as the acoustic telemetry of gyrocompass and attitude
data for navigation. Wideband acoustic telemetry offers
significant improvements in the efficiency of deep water
operations by greatly increasing the update rate for the
positioning of structures as they are deployed to the seabed.
Multi operation
use
The non-interfering properties
of wideband signal architectures effectively resolve the
interference problems that were a feature of conventional
acoustic positioning systems. The use of wideband signals
greatly simplifies the support of multiple simultaneous
positioning operations within the same frequency band and
within interference range. This has significant implications
in deep water oil field developments where acoustic systems
have an increasingly important role to play.
System performance
in the presence of multipath
 
Tone Burst Signal: Filter
response showing the effects of destructive interference
resulting from two overlapping uncoded signals arriving
at the transducer
Wideband Signal: Code correlation function allows the separation
of the same two paths using wideband signals. Both direct
and multipath signals can clearly be seen
The majority of deep water
drilling rigs, construction and survey vessels are permanently
equipped with Ultra-short Baseline (USBL) acoustic positioning
systems. These systems are used both for dynamic positioning
and for tracking the positions of Remotely Operated Vehicles
and other subsea targets. As economics generally preclude
the use of a drilling vessel for a subsea construction program
additional vessels are employed to complete the installation
of seabed infrastructure in deepwater oil field developments.
In many cases the development schedule often results in
concurrent drilling and installation activity which dictates
the use of additional vessels for installation operations.
Simultaneous operation of USBL systems that are limited
to tone burst technology within interference range of another
similar system can result in acoustic pollution that may
significantly affect positioning performance on both vessels.
Deep water drilling rigs are reliant on the integrity of
their acoustic positioning systems and the potential implications
of interference with the operation of these systems are
extremely serious. Using wideband signals in drilling rig
USBL systems effectively mitigates this risk and enables
better utilisation of the available bandwidth.
Conclusion
Any attempt to implement
a system that emulated GPS underwater would be technically
and commercially compromised by the differences between
atmosphere and ocean and the expense and complexity of the
measurement solution. However, the wideband signals that
are used so effectively in GPS do offer significant advantages
in the accepted techniques of USBL and LBL. Systems like
Sonardyne’ Fusion offer a low risk route to a step
change in performance through the support of wideband signals
and an integrated navigation and communication system that
addresses the contemporary requirements of the offshore
survey, construction and drilling industries.
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