Acoustics

What are the different Between Active and Passive Acoustic?

From Sound to Insight: Explore the Power of Acoustic Sensors
Acoustic sensors are transforming how we monitor, protect, and operate in aquatic environments—detecting underwater noise, emissions, and environmental change in real time.

Why Acoustics Matter at Sea

In the vast and complex underwater world, sound is the key to understanding and navigating. Marine acoustics allows us to detect life, assess ecosystems, and ensure safe operations beneath the waves. There are two primary approaches:
- Active acoustics, which emit sound and interpret the echoes
- Passive acoustics, which listen silently to natural and human-made underwater sounds
Understanding the difference is essential for designing monitoring systems that are both effective and sustainable.

What is Active Acoustic Technology?

Active acoustics use devices (transducers) to send out sound waves into the environment. These waves bounce back upon hitting objects or animals, and their echoes are analyzed to identify, locate, or map underwater features.
Because they actively emit sound, these systems require higher energy but deliver instant and detailed feedback, ideal for real-time applications.

Navigation & depth sounding

Fisheries & species tracking

Habitat & seabed mapping

Submarine and object detection

Behavioral monitoring of fish and marine mammals

Active sonar is used to monitor fish abundance, detect Krill swarms, and study dolphin behavior during targeted surveys or oceanographic campaigns.

What is Passive Acoustic Technology?

Passive acoustics use hydrophones or microphones to capture and analyze existing sounds in the environment—without emitting any signal. They simply "listen."
Passive systems require very low power, allowing for long-term deployments without disturbing wildlife—ideal for continuous monitoring.

Marine mammal surveillance

Noise pollution analysis

Underwater seismic detection

Animal migration & behavior tracking

Environmental compliance monitoring

Passive Acoustic Monitoring (PAM) is deployed in protected marine zones to detect whale vocalizations or monitor noise from vessel traffic—without disrupting the animals.

Future of Marine Acoustic Technology

Advancements in Active Acoustics

Multibeam sonar for 3D mapping

Higher frequency systems for fine detail

Autonomous deployment on AUVs & ROVs

Real-time processing for fast decision-making

Innovations in Passive Acoustics

Miniaturized hydrophones for flexible deployment

Directional listening arrays for source localization

Integration with AI to detect and classify species

Acoustic telemetry to track tagged marine life

Sinay's Integrated Acoustic Solutions

At Sinay, we lead innovation in both active and passive marine acoustics, offering cutting-edge technologies to monitor and protect ocean environments.
PAM buoys with wideband hydrophones for marine mammal detection
Sonar & active detection systems for hazard identification and object tracking
Integrated AI platform for analyzing noise levels and marine life data
Connectivity infrastructure to link sensors, vessels, and coastal stations
Custom dashboards for alerts, data visualization, and compliance reporting

Why Use Both?

Use active acoustics for

Mapping and real-time detection

Use active acoustics for

Long-term monitoring and conservation
Make your Maritime Activities Smarter and More Sustainable.
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