Abstract

Acoustic microphone arrays have been used in battlefield environments to detect and locate continuous wave targets like helicopters and ground vehicles, and for transient events like gunshots, mortars, rockets and explosions. Depending on the application, source bandwidth, propagation distance, and required localization accuracy, these arrays can vary their sensor separation greatly. Unattended ground sensors, manned- and unmanned-platforms, and Soldier-worn systems can all benefit from very small apertures if performance can be maintained. A commercially available acoustic particle velocity sensor, approximately one-half an inch in diameter, showed good transient localization at a field experiment. Data will also be presented from a small cluster-array of cardioid microphones.

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