MARUM Quantification Sonar Southern Hydrate Ridge
The Quantification Scanning Sonar (QSS) was developed in 2017 by Dr. Yann Marcon, Professor Gerhard Bohrmann, and a team of engineers at the MARUM Center for Marine Environmental Sciences and the Department of Geosciences, University of Bremen, Germany. It was funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) within the scope of the “M³: Monitoring Marine Methane” projects (grants 03F0765A and 03F0854A). The QSS focuses on selected vent sites at the summit of Southern Hydrate Ridge. It monitors the short-term variability of methane bubble plumes and changes in the seafloor morphology related to venting activity.
The QSS is a single-beam scanning sonar with an internal compass and a 360° scanning sector. The sonar is mounted on a 2.8 m high tripod (Figure 1). The QSS can operate at frequencies ranging from 500 kHz to 1.2 MHz. The beam width, which decreases with increasing operating frequencies, ranges from 45°x1.0° to 28°x0.6° (wide fan) and from 26°x1.2° to 20°x0.7° (narrow fan).
For most of its operating time, the QSS was set to operate at a frequency of 1000 kHz, a range of 20 m, a rotation angle of 360° and the minimum step size available (0.225°/step). The schedule consisted of one 15-minute long scanning sequence per hour. With these settings, a 15-minute scanning sequence recorded at least three consecutive 360° scans of the water column. However, the operation schedule of the QSS has changed a few times since the deployment of the instrument depending on the needs. The exact schedule can be inferred from the timestamp of the data files, while the operating settings can be retrieved from the data files.
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