Shark Attack Project - Marine Attack at Towed Hydrophone Arrays

Abstract

The original objective of the SIO Marine Attack project was to identify the electric and magnetic fields causing sharks to inflict serious damage upon the towed hydrophone arrays of US Navy submarines. In contrast to the geophysical arrays that we studied concurrently, the US Navy's arrays appeared to be electromagnetically very quiet by proper design. The only galvanic fields we measured were those of some set screws of a dissimilar metal than the seawater-exposed titanium parts and those of the titanium parts themselves, especially when scratched or abrades during employment. Those fields will evoke bites from sharks coming close to their sources, as we proved in behavioral experiments. Much more serious fields are the image fields of the arrays in the electric fields due to oceanic and ionospheric circulations. Since the latter fields can not be removed, we have added to the original project the innovative objective of designing weak counter fields to divert or utterly confuse any sharks coming near the arrays. While further studies in our Electromagnetic Research Facility and tests at sea to determine the efficacy of the counter fields were in progress, the project was abruptly canceled at the moment of breakthrough success for reasons unknown to us.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
May 13, 2005
Accession Number
ADA433306

Entities

People

  • Adrianus J. Kalmijn

Organizations

  • University of California Regents

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Ground and Sea Platforms

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Animals
  • California
  • Contracts
  • Contrast
  • Department Of Defense
  • Electric Fields
  • Fish
  • Hydrophones
  • Information Operations
  • Magnetic Fields
  • Military Research
  • Navy
  • Physical Oceanography
  • Research Facilities
  • Submarines
  • Titanium

Readers

  • Educational Psychology
  • Marine Mammal Biology
  • Plasma Physics / Magnetohydrodynamics