Echo Sounding: Using Ultrasound to Locate Objects Beneath Water

Echo Sounding: Using Ultrasound to Locate Objects Beneath Water

Assessment

Interactive Video

Physics, Science, Geography

10th Grade - University

Hard

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The video tutorial explains how ships use ultrasound technology, known as sonar or echo sounding, to locate objects beneath the water's surface. It describes the process of emitting an ultrasound pulse from a ship, which travels to the sea floor, reflects back, and is detected by the ship's receiver. The time taken for the echo to return is used to calculate the distance to the sea floor using the formula: distance = speed x time. An example calculation is provided, demonstrating how to determine the ocean's depth. The video also highlights that the ultrasound pulse travels twice the distance between the ship and the sea floor, requiring division by two to find the actual depth. Additionally, sonar can detect fish shoals, shipwrecks, and other underwater objects.

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OPEN ENDED QUESTION

3 mins • 1 pt

What new insight or understanding did you gain from this video?

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