EM1002 Operational Modes
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There are several operational modes available for
the EM1002. The differences in the modes are a function of pulse length, beam
spacing, and angular sector. The pulse length controls the amount of energy
transmitted into the water column. The system can be operated in an
“equiangular” (EA) mode in which the beams are spaced at equal angles apart,
resulting in a non-linear (increasing spacing away from nadir) spacing of sonar
footprints on the seafloor. The system can also be operated in an "equidistant”
(EDBS) mode in which the beams are spaced such that the sonar footprints are
equally spaced in the across-track profile. The EDBS geometry is achieved by
generating variable beamangular spacings. Although EDBS has advantages in data
handling (i.e., provides even sounding density), there are two limitations. The
beams in the 140° and 150° modes are spaced wider than their beam widths and
results in incomplete coverage that produces a striping close to nadir. This
problem disappears as the swath width closes to ~120°. However, the second
limitation occurs because of attitude uncertainties and imperfect refraction
models that can result in sounding errors that grow with angle from the
vertical. Because these limitations render the outermost beams less reliable
than for the EA mode, we preferred to use the EA mode.
The Crater Lake survey was carried out in the EA mode. In the EA
mode, the EM1002 was operated with a 0.2 ms pulse length in waters less than 150
m deep, and the swath width was constrained to 120° swath. In waters deeper than
150 m, the EM1002 switched to a 0.7 ms pulse length and restricted to an 800-m
swath width.