$5 whale listening hydrophone making workshop
Posted by gsf_emergency_6 4 days ago
Comments
Comment by asdhtjkujh 1 hour ago
Recording full-fidelity whale or dolphin sounds (amongst others) requires using a higher sample rate than is available in most consumer-grade equipment. There's a lot more information down there!
Comment by gehsty 6 hours ago
I worked on DAS acoustic monitoring for subsea power cables (to monitor cable health!), turns out they are basically a submarine detection system.
Comment by quietbritishjim 1 hour ago
Supposedly new submarines are so quiet that they can't be detected anyway. I'm sure there's a large element of exaggerating abilities here, but there's definitely an element of truth: in 2009, two submarines carrying nuclear weapons (not just nuclear powered) collided, presumably because they couldn't detect each other. If a nuclear submarine cannot detect another nuclear submarine right next to it then it's unlikely your $5 hydrophone will detect one at a distance.
Of course, none of this means that the military will be rational enough not to be annoyed with you.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Vanguard_and_Le_Triomphant...
Comment by sigmoid10 4 hours ago
Comment by defrost 4 hours ago
For interest:
* it's one reason we know so much about ocean tempretures and tangentially have great data on climate change being real, and
* they had some cool R&D vessels:
FLIP was originally built to support research into the fine-scale phase and amplitude fluctuations in undersea sound waves caused by thermal gradients and sloping ocean bottoms. This acoustic research was conducted as a portion of the Navy's SUBROC program.
~ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RP_FLIPComment by hencq 3 hours ago
Comment by zipy124 4 hours ago
Comment by sandworm101 3 hours ago
Comment by andai 3 hours ago
Comment by sandworm101 4 hours ago
https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-22/chapter-I/subchapter-M...
(Search for hydrophone)
Comment by emsign 4 hours ago
Comment by unwind 6 hours ago
Here [1] is a page at Klover, and here [2] is one at Shure. Not sure if there's a formal specification for this, or if it's just something that manufacturers started doing.
[1]: https://www.kloverproducts.com/blog/what-is-plugin-power
[2]: https://service.shure.com/s/article/difference-between-bias-...
Comment by emsign 4 hours ago
Comment by iefbr14 4 days ago
Comment by turtleyacht 4 days ago
https://github.com/Vivek-Tate/IDS-Detection-and-Exploiting-V...
Comment by wzdd 6 hours ago
Comment by bcraven 2 hours ago
Information here from a superb podcast
Comment by gnatman 1 hour ago
Comment by micw 5 hours ago
Comment by fleahunter 3 hours ago
Most bioacoustics work now is: deploy a recorder, stream terabytes to the cloud, let a model find “whale = 0.93” segments, and then maybe a human listens to 3 curated clips in a slide deck. The goal is classification, not experience. The machines get the hours-long immersion that Roger Payne needed to even notice there was such a thing as a song, and humans get a CSV of detections.
A $5 hydrophone you built yourself flips that stack. You’re not going to run a transformer on it in real time, you’re going to plug it into a laptop or phone and just…listen. Long, boring, context-rich listening, exactly the thing the original discovery came from and that our current tooling optimizes away as “inefficient”.
If this stuff ever scales, I could imagine two very different futures: one is “citizen-science sensor network feeding central ML pipelines”, the other is “cheap instruments that make it normal to treat soundscapes as part of your lived environment”. The first is useful for papers. The second actually changes what people think the ocean is.
The $5 is important because it makes the second option plausible. You don’t form a relationship with a black-box $2,000 research hydrophone you’re scared to break. You do with something you built, dunked in a koi pond, and used to hear “fish kisses”. That’s the kind of interface that quietly rewires people’s intuitions about non-human worlds in a way no spectrogram ever will.
Comment by jasonjayr 8 minutes ago
RTL-SDR is another area where this there is so much to see 'hidden' in electromagnetic radio frequency space.
Comment by micw 5 hours ago
Can we now have lot of audio records with a documentation of whale behavior to train an AI and get a whale-translator at the end?
Comment by mkmk 21 minutes ago
Comment by throw310822 7 hours ago
Comment by actionfromafar 6 hours ago
Comment by blitzar 4 hours ago