Available:*
Library | Item Barcode | Call Number | Material Type | Item Category 1 | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Searching... | 30000010138564 | QC242.2 S33 2007 | Open Access Book | Book | Searching... |
On Order
Summary
Summary
The most comprehensive book on electroacoustic transducers and arrays for underwater sound
Includes transducer modeling techniques and transducer designs that are currently in use
Includes discussion and analysis of array interaction and nonlinear effects in transducers
Contains extensive data in figures and tables needed in transducer and array design
Written at a level that will be useful to students as well as to practicing engineers and scientists
Author Notes
Dr. Charles H. Sherman received the B. S. degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the M. S. and Ph. D degrees from the University of Connecticut. He worked mainly at the Navy Underwater Sound Laboratory in New London, CT, but also at Tracerlab, Inc. in Boston, MA, and Parke Mathematical Laboratories in Carlisle, MA, and now works at Image Acoustics, Inc. He has presented and published over thirty papers related to acoustics and transducers, and was elected Fellow of the Acoustical Society of America in 1974. He taught advanced acoustics at the University of Connecticut and transducers in the Ocean Engineering Department of the University of Rhode Island. He has over 40 years experience in underwater sound transducers and arrays.
Dr. John L. Butler is President and Chief Scientist at Image Acoustics, Inc. and has had over thirty five years of both practical and theoretical experience in the design and analysis of underwater sound transducers and arrays. He has worked for Harris Transducer (now Harris Acoustic Products Corporation), Parke Mathematical Laboratories, Massa Products Corporation and Raytheon Company, consulted to a number of underwater acoustics firms and the U. S. Navy, taught courses in acoustics, holds seventeen patents on transducers and has presented or published over thirty papers on electroacoustic transducers. In 1977 he was elected Fellow of the Acoustical Society of America. His education includes: Ph. D., Northeastern University, Boston, MA, and Sc. M., Brown University, Providence, RI.
Table of Contents
Introduction |
Electroacoustic Transduction |
Transducers as Projectors |
Transducers as Hydrophones |
Project Arrays |
Hydrophone Arrays |
Transducer Models |
Transducer Characteristics |
Nonlinear Mechanisms and Their Effects |
Acoustic Radiation from Transducers |
Advanced Acoustic Radiation Calculations |
Transducer Evaluation and Measurement |
The Future |
Appendix |
Glossary of Terms |