US3789353A - Diver communication system - Google Patents

Diver communication system Download PDF

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US3789353A
US3789353A US00320781A US3789353DA US3789353A US 3789353 A US3789353 A US 3789353A US 00320781 A US00320781 A US 00320781A US 3789353D A US3789353D A US 3789353DA US 3789353 A US3789353 A US 3789353A
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output
pass filter
inputs
signal input
low pass
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E Hunter
D Smith
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US Department of Navy
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01SRADIO DIRECTION-FINDING; RADIO NAVIGATION; DETERMINING DISTANCE OR VELOCITY BY USE OF RADIO WAVES; LOCATING OR PRESENCE-DETECTING BY USE OF THE REFLECTION OR RERADIATION OF RADIO WAVES; ANALOGOUS ARRANGEMENTS USING OTHER WAVES
    • G01S3/00Direction-finders for determining the direction from which infrasonic, sonic, ultrasonic, or electromagnetic waves, or particle emission, not having a directional significance, are being received
    • G01S3/80Direction-finders for determining the direction from which infrasonic, sonic, ultrasonic, or electromagnetic waves, or particle emission, not having a directional significance, are being received using ultrasonic, sonic or infrasonic waves
    • G01S3/802Systems for determining direction or deviation from predetermined direction
    • G01S3/803Systems for determining direction or deviation from predetermined direction using amplitude comparison of signals derived from receiving transducers or transducer systems having differently-oriented directivity characteristics
    • G01S3/8034Systems for determining direction or deviation from predetermined direction using amplitude comparison of signals derived from receiving transducers or transducer systems having differently-oriented directivity characteristics wherein the signals are derived simultaneously
    • G01S3/8036Systems for determining direction or deviation from predetermined direction using amplitude comparison of signals derived from receiving transducers or transducer systems having differently-oriented directivity characteristics wherein the signals are derived simultaneously derived directly from separate directional systems

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  • DIVER COMMUNICATION SYSTEM Inventors: Earl Kent Hunter, Gig Harbor,
  • the two channels of said binaural receiver incorporate substantially identical adjustable gain amplifiers, respectively, the gains of which are identically regulated by a single control signal from a unique feedback type of signal amplitude enhancement. circuit that is effective to further distinguish the amplitudes of the speech signals being processed within one receiver channel relative to those being processed within the other receiver channel, to thereby facilitate the localization of the speech signals received by said diver from said ambient subaqueous environmental medium.
  • the present invention relates, in general, to communication systems, and, in particular, it is a sonar system for communicating and navigating within a subaqueous medium.
  • the invention is a binaural sonar system combined with a face mask in such unique manner that it facilitates the communication, target search, navigation, and homing operations of swimmers and divers operating within waters which would otherwise constitute adverse environmental conditions.
  • the instant invention overcomes many of the disadvantages of the prior art, in that it enables underwater swimmers to communicate intelligibly in a manner that is somewhat similar, as far as psychological and physiological experiences are concerned, to normal talking and hearing in an atmospheric environment by a human being.
  • Another object of this invention is to provide an improved echo-search-ranging system.
  • Still another object of this invention is to provide an improved sonar system in which the output thereof is produced as enhanced binaural signals which provide bearing information of received acoustical energy when listened to by human ears.
  • a further object of this invention is to provide an acoustical communication system having an improved signal-to-noise ratio.
  • Another object of this invention is to provide an improved underwater communication and face mask combination which will essentially free a swimmerdiver from the burden of large, heavy, cumbersome, communication apparatus, thereby allowing said swimmer-diver considerably greater freedom of movement and complete freedom of hand use within sea water or the like.
  • a further object of this invention is to provide an improved method and means for localizing the source of various and sundry underwater sounds.
  • Still another object of this invention is to provide a method and means for improving the binaural capabilities as a result of incorporating both amplitude and phase discrimination techniques in an underwater communication system.
  • Another object of this invention is to provide restoration of binaural hearing and acoustical signal localization abilities to an individual operating in an otherwise acoustical signal diffusing environmental medium, such as pressurized helium, sea water, or the like.
  • Another object of this invention is to provide an improved voice activated underwater communication system.
  • Another object of this invention is to provide an underwater communication system that is easily and economically manufactured, operated, and maintained.
  • FIG. I is a schematic elevational view of the transmitter portion of the subject invention mounted in and in cooperative association with a swimmer-diver face mask;
  • FIG. 2 is a schematic perspective view of headset and earphone arrangements employed which constitutes the receiver portion in the subject invention
  • FIG. 3 is a block diagram of the swimmer-diver underwater communication system of this invention.
  • FIG. 4 is a graphical representation of the acoustical response patterns of the receiving hydrophones of the instant invention.
  • FIG. 1 there is shown a face mask 11 of the type which is typically worn by swimmers and divers.
  • face masks, divers helmets, etc. are commercially available, and anyone thereof may be employed as a component of this invention, as long as it allows freedom of lip and jaw movements, has sufficient room in it to allow emplacement of the transmitting and/or receiving apparatus therein, and meets the physiological requirements of the swimmer-diver.
  • the acoustic frequency response of the speaking cavity of face mask Ill should be determined under all environmental conditions, so that it may be frequency compensated both electronically and mechanically so that the overall system will have as flat a frequency response as possible and, thus, enhance communication intelligibility.
  • face masks have a 6 db per octave signal attenuation or downslope, with a resonant peak somewhere between 500 and 1,000 Hz. Therefore, it is necessary to compensate for such downslope, if optimum operation is to be obtained. Such compensation is accomplished within the transmitter electronics portion 12 of the invention, as will be discussed more fully subsequently.
  • a rechargeable battery pack 13 is deployed within mask 11 and is connected to encased electronics portion 112 by means of intercabling l4.
  • Intercabling 14 in addition to supplying power to the electronic circuitry, also transmits electrical signals from a transmitter 15 a part of said electronics circuitry 14 to a broadcasting electroacoustical transducer 16 located on the other side of the face mask, in this particular instance.
  • a connector 17 Disposed in cable 14 is a connector 17, which enables transmitter 15 to automatically be turned off merely by breaking the electrical circuit thereat. It is preferably an Electro Oceanics 59F2F-l connector that can be connected and disconnected underwater.
  • a microphone 18 is also included within face mask 11. It, too, must be both pressure and waterproof. In this particular instance, it has been found, for example, that a three-quarter inch diameter ceramic bimorph connected in series, potted in any suitable potting compound, such as, for example, a self-leveling silicone rubber compound, and encased in a neoprene cup is quite satisfactory as microphone 18, inasmuch as such element has approximately a 6 db per octave upslope and will, thus, help compensate for the aforementioned downslope of mask 11.
  • any suitable potting compound such as, for example, a self-leveling silicone rubber compound
  • any other suitable microphone may be employed as microphone 18, if so desired by the artisan or the swimmer-diver.
  • An external connector 19 provides a preamplified speech output for use by voice recorders, wire communication systems, and other external and/or remote systems, requiring voice input (not shown and not a part of this invention).
  • FIG. 2 shows a headset 20 which preferably includes the receiver circuitry 21 of the subject system, the electronics of which will be discussed more fully below.
  • a pair of receiver channels which are signal processors for the ears of the swimmer-diver, respectively.
  • headset 20 contains a right ear receiver channel 22 and a left ear receiver channel 23, each of which includes substantially similar receiver channel components that are interconnected by a unique binaural amplitude enhancement circuit that may be physically disposed in the housing of either one thereof (or optionally within the electronics portion of the aforesaid face mask 1 1, if so desired).
  • Said receiver channels will be discussed in greater detail in'conjunction with FIG. 3.
  • Receiver channels 22 and 23 are, in this particular embodiment, respectively encased in any suitable pressure proof, waterproof housings 24 and 25. They include receiving hydrophones 26 and 27, respectively, which are mounted on the outer sides thereof for diametrically opposed response to incoming acoustical energy which, thus, effectively impacts thereon from opposite directions, just as the ears do for any given human being. As will be explained in better detail subsequently, such opposite directional response characteristics play an important part in enabling the swimmer-diver to localize and determine the direction from which a sound is coming within water, sea water, or the like something which, in actual practice is exceedingly difficult to do.
  • receiver channels 22 and 23 constitute earphones 28 and 29, respectively, and, of course, they are adapted for fitting firrnly against the ears of the swimmer-diver.
  • a headpiece 31 interconnects both receiver channels both electrically and physically and enables the receiver to be properly and conventionally mounted on the swimmers head.
  • a unique binaural enhancement circuit (not shown in FIG. 2) is appropriately connected between the receiver channels; consequently, it may be physically located anywhere in headset 20 that would be structurally and electrically convenient.
  • a pair of external connectors 32 and 33 are optionally mounted on the receiver channels, in order to connect external and perhaps remote recording equip ment thereto.
  • FIG. 3 wherein the elements disclosed are indicated by the same reference numerals as employed in the disclosure thereon in FIGS. 1 and 2, insofar as it is possible and practical.
  • the aforesaid single sideband transmitter 15 which, of course, may be incorporated as a portion of electronics 12 in swimmer-diver face mask 11.
  • a 6,000 I-Iz low pass filter 42 employed for the purpose of eliminating external noise above the desired human speech band of, say, from 300 to 6,000 Hz and to provide approximately a 6 db per octave signal upslope or enhancement, to fully compensate for the 6 db per octave signal attenuation or downslope inherently caused by the face mask.
  • the output of low pass filter 42 is connected to the input of an adjustable gain preamplifier 43, which is preferably designed in such manner that a flat frequency response occurs within the transmitter portion of the invention.
  • the output of preamplifier 43 is connected to one of the inputs of a balanced modulator 44 and the input of an input signal actuated switch which, in this particular case, effectively operates as a selective activator filter and voice'operated switch (VOX')
  • voice operated switch 45 As would be obvious to one skilled in the art, voice operated switch 45, as it is presently connected to its associated components, is, in fact, actuated by the electrical signal equivalent of the human voice after it has been properly filtered and amplified.
  • the voice operated switch should be conventionally designed to be inoperative below a given threshold or voice volume and selective to only diver voice signatures, thereby preventing the broadcasting of such undesirable and noise producing signals as diver breathing and movement signals and water bubble sounds.
  • Any commercially available or conventional voice operated switch means having the above mentioned operational characteristics may be employed as voice operated switch 45 in the subject invention.
  • the other input of balanced modulator 44 is connected to the output of an 8.087 KHz local oscillator 46, which may or may not be considered as being part of transmitter 15. Since local oscillator 46 is used as the heterodyning signal generator for both the transmitter and the receiver in this preferred embodiment, it is considered as being separate from each thereof. However, it should be understood that both the transmitter and the receiver may have their own individual local oscillator, if so desired, as long as the signal frequencies thereof are identical.
  • local oscillator 46 alone is incorporated in this disclosed preferred embodiment of the invention because it has been determined that so doing enhances the phase aspect of the binaural characteristics produced thereby as a result of using a common carrier frequency in both demodulators which cause the demodulated output signals therefrom to retain any phase differences between the receiver channels.
  • the output of balanced modulator 44 is connected to the data signal input of a gate 47, the control input of which is connected to the output of voice operated switch 45.
  • gate 47 is a voltage controlled gate which is normally closed but is opened whenever a predetermined voltage signal is supplied to the control input thereof as a result of switch 45 being effectively opened by the speech of the swimmer-diver.
  • switch 45 is actually opened by the filtered and amplified electrical signal that is proportional to the acoustical speech signal supplied to microphone 18 minus any spurious signals, such as, for instance, breathing sounds, and the like.
  • the output of gate 47 is connected to the input of a bandpass filter 48, in order to eliminate the lower sideband output signals effectively supplied thereto from modulator 44, and the output of filter 48, in turn, connected with a power amplifier 49 to the input of electroacoustical transducer 16 adapted for broadcasting the aforesaid modified speech signals throughout the subaqucous medium, such as water, sea water, or the like, within which the swimmer-diver is submerged or throughout any other predetermined suitable environmental medium.
  • said modified speech signals are, in fact, the communication signals which allows one diver to talk to another diver having similar transmitting and receiving apparatus while both are under water.
  • a receiver system 21 is used to receive the talk signals of substantially comparable frequencies and qualities from other divers, as suggested above. It contains the aforementioned pair of signal processing channels 22 and 23 which are adopted for supplying said speech signals to the ears of a diver, respectively. However, as will be explained in greater detail subsequently, they do it in such manner as to uniquely improve the binaural characteristics thereof and, thus, enable a diver to localize and determine the direction from which talk signals are coming, even though the entire communications system constituting this invention may have been miniaturized or compacted by the employment of solid state or other suitable manufacturing techniques to the extent that it is combined with the divers face mask and be in proximity with his head and ears.
  • Receiver channel 22 includes the aforesaid electroacoustical hydrophone 26, the output of which is con nected through a preamplifier 56 to the input of bandpass filter 57 of the type that is similar to the aforesaid bandpass filter 48 in transmitter 15.
  • the output of filter 57 is connected to the data signal input of an adjustable gain amplifier 58, the gain of which is adjusted in proportion with whatever voltage signal is supplied to the gain control input thereof.
  • the output of amplifier 58 is connected to one of the inputs of a demodulator 59, with the other input thereof being connected to the output of the aforementioned local oscillator 46.
  • receiver 211 may be selfcontained and have its own local oscillator, as long as the signal frequency thereof is identical to that supplied to balanced modulator 44 in transmitter 115.
  • demodulator 59 heterodynes the incoming modified speech signal down to its original frequency range of between 300 and 6,000 l-lz, so that it will be intelligible when received by the divers ear.
  • a low pass filter 61 is connected to the output of demodulator 59, in order that said diver only receives the lower side band output that is, said 300 to 6,000 Hz talk signals therefrom.
  • the output of low pass filter 61 is connected through a power amplifier 62 to the input of the aforesaid earphone 28, which, as previously indicated, is physically disposed in contiguous relationship with one of the divers ears, so that the diver may hear the talk signals emanating therefrom while he is working in an underwater environment.
  • receiver channel 23 should be as identical as possible to receiver channel 22; therefore, the components thereof are substantially identical to the above described components of said channel 22, respectively.
  • the aforesaid hydrophone 27, a preamplifier 65, a bandpass filter 66, a variable gain amplifier 67, a balanced demodulator 68, a low pass filter 59, a power amplifier 71, and the aforesaid earphone 29' are connected in series in the same manner as the components comparable thereto were series connected in channel 22.
  • Said binaural enhancement circuit 73 includes a summing amplifier 74 having a pair of inputs which are connected to the outputs of the aforesaid variable gain amplifiers 58 and 67 of receiver channels 22 and 23, respectively.
  • the output of summing amplifier 74 is connected to the input of a direct current (DC) voltage peak detector 75, the output of which is connected to the gain control inputs of said variable gain amplifiers 58 and 67.
  • DC direct current
  • FIG. 4 depicts schematically the top of the head of a diver 81 (otherwise not shown), with right and left hydrophones 26 and 27 physically located in association therewith in such manner that the respective response patterns are oppositely directed cardioid patterns 82 and 83, mathematically defined by the expressions l cos and 1 cos 0, respectively.
  • said hydrophones are preferably designed so that the outer cardioid radius (2A), as measured from the center of diver head 81, is twice the distance (A) of their radius of intersection, likewise measured from the center of diver head 81.
  • 2A the outer cardioid radius
  • such structural arrangement and dispositions of receiving hydrophones further enhance the discernment of the diver, as far as the direction of incoming sound is concerned.
  • signal enhancement circuit 73 discussed above, the listening characteristics of a swimmer-diver working underwater are more nearly the same as they would be if he were working in the atmosphere with only his ears as the sound receptors.
  • the subject invention is primarily intended to facilitate the operation of a diver within water and within considerable depths thereof; however, it should be understood that it may also be used to an advantage in other environmental mediums such as, for instance, pressurized helium if so desired and designed therefor by one skilled in the art having the benefit of the teachings presented herewith.
  • a swimmer-diver wears the face mask and headset disclosed in FIGS. 1 and 2. Hence, he can speak into the transmitter and hear from the receiver portions thereof without carrying additional apparatus or without requiring the use of his hands.
  • This is very advantageous, because the diver is not handicapped by the unwieldy burden of an undue load and,
  • transmitter 15 and receiver 21 may thus be considered to be a unique transmitreceive system in the disclosed preferred embodiment.
  • two independent local oscillators may be employed, if so desired.
  • both transmitter 15 and receiver 21 could be considered as being self-contained units.
  • microphone 18 is located in proximity with the divers mouth, so that he may speak into it without undue effort.
  • Microphone l8 conven-- tionally converts the acoustical energy of the divers voice into a proportional electrical speech signal that is processed by 6,000 Hz low pass filter 42 to remove all external noise above the speech band, as well as other spurious and feedback signals. Then, the output is amplified by preamplifier 43 to provide a 6 db per octave upslope for face mask downslope compensation purposes, thereby effecting a substantially flat frequency response which enhances signal intelligibility.
  • the filtered and preamplified speech signal falls within approximately the 300 to 6,000 Hz frequency band and is then heterodyned with an 8.087 KHZ signal from oscillator 46.
  • a predetermined frequency signature portion thereof passes through selective filter and VOX 45 and opens gate 47 to let the heterodyned output signal from balanced modulator 44 pass therethrough.
  • the output from modulator 44 consists of the upper and lower side bands having frequencies of 8-14 KHz and 2-8 KHz, respectively.
  • band pass filter 48 In order to provide improved intelligibility, a 6,000 Hz speech bandwidth is maintained throughout the subject system; therefore, only the 8-14 KHz upper side band is passed through band pass filter 48, after which it is amplified by power amplifier 49 and braodcast or projected into the ambient water by transmitting transducer 16.
  • speech transmission is primarily intended for receipt by another diver, but because receiver 21 remains on constantly so as to require no external cabling or controls the speaking diver receives his own speech signals, which he can hear as a result of the processing thereof by his own receiver, namely, in this particular instance, receiver 21.
  • receiver 21 it should also be obvious that all of the communicating divers must wear one of the subject communication systems, if actual communication of the speaking-hearing type is to occur.
  • Receiver 21 receives the incoming speech signals by means of hydrophones 26 and 27 of receiver channels 22 and 23, respectively. Because both of said receiver channels internally process the received signals in the same manner, only channel 22 will be described, in order to keep this disclosure as simple as possible.
  • the 8-14 KI-Iz acoustical speech signals are received from within the ambient water environment, they are transduced into electrical signals proportional thereto by hydrophone 26 (say, the right hydrophone, in this case), after which they are amplified to a more useful level by preamplifier 56. After such amplification, they are filtered by 8-14 KHz bandpass filter 57,
  • the filtered output speech signals from filter 57 are then amplified an appropriate amount as determined by signal enhancement circuit 73, to be explained shortly by variable gain amplifier 58 before being heterodyned down to the original speech frequency range of from 300 to 6,000 Hz by balanced demodulator 59 and oscillator 46. Then said original speech frequency output signals from demodulator 59 are filtered by 6,000 Hz low pass filter to insure passage of audible speech signals only before being amplified to a more useful level by power amplifier 62 and supplied to the divers ear say, the right ear, in this particular instance by earphone 28.
  • the aforesaid power amplifier 62 is preferably designed to compensate for any signal attenuation caused by the downslope of frequency response inherently introduced by the aforementioned earphone 28 and the human ear being immersed in water.
  • a human ear immersed in water loses some of its ability to localize the source of underwater sounds.
  • This invention restores such ability to the swimmer-diver by means of signal amplitude enhancement and discrimination techniques which, in effect, improve the binaural aspects thereof.
  • binaural effects are improved by two separate and distinct structural entities, which, although operative individually, combine associatively to produce results that are superior to either one used alone or both thereof merely added to gether.
  • signal enhancement circuit 73 in combination with adjustable gain amplifiers 58 and 67 of receiver channels 22 and 23.
  • channels 22 and 23 are substantially identical in structure and operation; therefore, the analysis of channel 23 will not be belabored herein.
  • the amplification characteristic curves of amplifiers 58 and 67 should be as identical as possible, if optimum performance is to be obtained from the overall invention.
  • the outputs of adjustable gain amplifiers 58 and 67 are supplied to the inputs of summing amplifier 74 which, in turn, produces a composite output signal that is proportional to the addition of the voltages thereof.
  • This composite signal is then peak detected, so as to produce a direct current (DC) control voltage signal that is proportional to peak thereof, and such peak DC control signal is supplied to the control inputs of amplifiers 58 and 67 for appropriate regulation of the gain thereof.
  • amplifiers 58 and 67 should be designed by the artisan to be decreased in gain for an increase in the composite gain control signal and vice versa.
  • the incoming speech signal originates at a point directly in front of the diver, it will be amplified the same amount in amplifiers 58 and 67 and the divers ears will hear signals of equal intensity and of the same phase.
  • the speech signals received by the divers right or left ear will be stronger and a phase difference will exist proportional to the degree of offset from center of the source and its frequencies, depending upon which direction they come.
  • the sonic signal source say, another diver 85 that is speaking is to the right of the receiving or hearing diver, hydrophone 26 (as best seen in FIG.
  • binaural enhancement is achieved in water, in proportion to the addition of the received signals which facilitates ascertaining the signal source direction or hearing. This, in turn, makes it easier for a diver to retain his orientation, even though he and the person or persons with whom he is communicating may be working in the dark in deep or turbid water.
  • the phase thereof is delayed at the hydrophone that receives it last, as a result of their greater travel distance in an aqueous medium.
  • the effective intensity differences of the received signals are enhanced by the respective hydrophone cardioid response patterns which, in turn, are arranged in diametrically opposed dispositions as a result of the opposite orientations of the hydrophones themselves on the head of the diver, as previously mentioned. Such arrangement and evidence of response patterns can best be seen in FIG.
  • response pattern 82 of hydrophone 26 is depicted graphically and is mathematically defined by the expression 1 cos 0, where 6 is the angle measured around the center (C) of diver head 81
  • response pattern 83 of hydrophone 27 is depicted graphically and is mathematically defined by the expression 1 cos 6, where 6 is again the angle measured around the center (C) of diver head 81.
  • hydrophone 26 would produce an output signal that is proportional in intensity to RC
  • hydrophone 27 would produce an output signal that is proportional in intensity to LC
  • the output signal voltage from right hydrophone 26 would be greater than the output signal voltage from left hydrophone 27.
  • the instant swimmer-diver communications system constitutes an advancement in the art and that, to some extent, it achieves objectives heretofore unattainable. Accordingly, it is a new and exceedingly useful method and means for enabling intelligible communication to occur between people: and/or other beings response to human speech or other transmitted sound.
  • the invention as an active or passive sonar system, wherein the transmitter broadcasts certain speech or other signals as target search signals that are received as target echo signals by the receiver, which,
  • a communications system comprising in combination:
  • a heterodyne transmitter for broadcasting a first signal within a first predetermined frequency range throughout a predetermined environmental medium'
  • a heterodyne receiver having a pair of receiving channels, each of which includes a voltage controlled amplifier, contiguously disposed with said heterodyne receiver, for receiving signals within said first predetermined frequency range and heterodyning them back within said second frequency range;
  • said communication system is a binaural underwater communication system, wherein said predetermined environmental medium is water, and wherein said second signal within a second predetermined frequency is a signal that is generated by and proportional to the sonic energy-produced by the human voice.
  • heterodyne transmitter comprises:
  • a low pass filter connected to the output of said microphone
  • a balanced modulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof effectively connected to the output of said low pass filter;
  • a normally closed gate having a data signal input
  • control signal input 'and an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said balanced modulator, and with the control signal input thereof adapted for effecting the opening thereof in response to a control signal within a predetermined frequency range;
  • a low pass filter connected to the output of said microphone
  • a balanced modulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof effectively connected to the output of said low pass filter;
  • a normally closed gate having a data signal input, a control signal input, and an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said balanced modulator, and with the control signal input thereof adapted for effecting the opening thereof in response to a control signal within a predetermined frequency range;
  • a local oscillator connected to the other input of said balanced modulator.
  • heterodyne transmitter comprises:
  • a low pass filter connected to the output of said microphone
  • a balanced modulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof effectively connected to the output of said low pass filter;
  • a normally closed gate having a data signal input, a control signal input, and an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said balanced modulator, and with the control signal input thereof adapted for effecting the opening thereof in response to a control signal within a predetermined frequency range;
  • heterodyne transmitter comprises:
  • a low pass filter connected to the output of said microphone
  • a balanced modulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof effectively connected to the output of said low pass filter;
  • a normally closed gate having a data signal input, a 'control signal input, and an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said balanced modulator, and with the control signal input thereof adapted for effecting the opening thereof in response to a control signal within a predetermined frequency range;
  • said means connected between the outputs and control inputs of the voltage control amplifiers of said pairs of receiving channels for regulating the respective amplifications thereof in proportion to the peak of the sum of the output signals from said voltage controlled amplifiers comprises:
  • a summing amplifier having a pair of inputs and an output, with the inputs thereof respectively con nected to the outputs of said voltage controlled amplifiers;
  • a direct current peak detector connected between the output of said summing amplifier and the control inputs of said voltage control amplifiers.
  • the invention of claim ll further characterized by a face mask means surrounding the transmitter and transmitter actuation means of said communication system for the housing thereof therein when said face mask means is worn by a swimmer-diver.
  • the invention of claim ll further characterized by a local oscillator connected to said heterodyne transmitter and each of said pair of receiving channels of said heterodyne receiver for supplying a predetermined heterodying signal thereto.
  • each of said pair of receiving channels of the aforesaid heterodyne receiver comprises:
  • a voltage controlled amplifier having a data signal input, a control input, and an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said band pass filter, and with the control input responsive to a voltage control signal;
  • a balanced demodulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof connected to the output of said voltage controlled amplifier;
  • An underwater communication system comprising in combination:
  • a first low pass filter connected to the output of said microphone
  • a first preamplifier connected to the output of said low pass filter
  • a balanced modulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof connected to the output of said first preamplifier;
  • a gate having a data signal input, a control input, and
  • a voice operated switch connected between the output of the aforesaid first preamplifier and the control input of said gate;
  • a first band pass filter connected to the output of said gate first power amplifier connected to the output of said first band pass filter
  • a transmitting transducer connected to the output of said first power amplifier
  • a second band pass filter connected to the output of said second preamplifier
  • a first voltage controlled amplifier having a data signal input, a control input, and an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said second band pass filter;
  • a first balanced demodulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof connected to the output of said first voltage controlled amplifier
  • a first earphone connected to the output of said sec ond power amplifier
  • a third preamplifier connected to the output of said second hydrophone
  • third band pass filter connected to the output of said third preamplifier
  • second voltage controlled amplifier having a data signal input, a control input, and an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said third band pass filter;
  • second balanced demodulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof connected to the output of said second voltage controlled amplifier;
  • a third low pass filter connected to the output of said second balanced demodulator
  • a third power amplifier connected to the output of said third low pass filter
  • a summing amplifier having a pair of inputs and an output, with the inputs thereof respectively connected to the outputs of said first and second voltage controlled amplifiers;
  • a direct current voltage peak detector having an input and an output, with the input thereof connected to the output of said summing amplifier, and with the output thereof connected to the control inputs of the aforesaid first and second voltage controlled amplifiers.

Abstract

An underwater diver communication system is disclosed as including a voice actuated transmitter for broadcasting speech signals throughout an ambient subaqueous environmental medium combined with a two-channel, binaural, speech signal receiver by means of a common local oscillator connected therebetween which, in turn, effects relative phase enhancement in the channels thereof. In addition, the two channels of said binaural receiver incorporate substantially identical adjustable gain amplifiers, respectively, the gains of which are identically regulated by a single control signal from a unique feedback type of signal amplitude enhancement circuit that is effective to further distinguish the amplitudes of the speech signals being processed within one receiver channel relative to those being processed within the other receiver channel, to thereby facilitate the localization of the speech signals received by said diver from said ambient subaqueous environmental medium.

Description

United States Patent [191 Hunter et al.
DIVER COMMUNICATION SYSTEM Inventors: Earl Kent Hunter, Gig Harbor,
Wash; Don G. Smith, Shalimar, Fla.
The United States of America as represented by the Secretary of the Navy, Washington, DC.
Filed: Jan. 3, 1973 Appl. No.: 320,781
[73] Assignee:
[56] References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 3,l8l,i l6 4/1965 Gordon 340/5 T irimq eamin -Biennia- Fat eyi V, Attorney, Agent, or Firm-Richard S. Sciascia, Don D. Doty, Harvey A. David FILTER AND VOICE OPERATED SWITCH ABSTRACT An underwater diver communication system is disclosed as including a voice actuated transmitter for broadcasting speech signals throughout an ambient subaqueous environmental medium combined with a two-channel, binaural, speech signal receiver by means of a common local oscillator connected therebetween which, in turn, effects relative phase enhancement in the channels thereof. In addition, the two channels of said binaural receiver incorporate substantially identical adjustable gain amplifiers, respectively, the gains of which are identically regulated by a single control signal from a unique feedback type of signal amplitude enhancement. circuit that is effective to further distinguish the amplitudes of the speech signals being processed within one receiver channel relative to those being processed within the other receiver channel, to thereby facilitate the localization of the speech signals received by said diver from said ambient subaqueous environmental medium.
16 Claims, 4 Drawing Figures eawopass J FILTER l GATE |l L BALANCED MODULATOR I 42 F I' r""' PRE- LOW PASS 4 & AMP HLTER MICROPHONE DEMOD ULATOR LOW PASS PWR FILTER EAR PHONE I A osc 68 ,e9 7| 29 I v I I BALANCED Low PASS PWR DEMOD- EAR PHONE ULATOR F'UER I PATENIEUJAHZS) I974 SHEET 2 BF 2 DIVER COMMUNICATION SYSTEM STATEMENT OF GOVERNMENT INTEREST The invention described herein may be manufactured and used by or for the Government of the United States of America for governmental purposes without the payment of any royalties thereon or therefor.
FIELD OF THE INVENTION The present invention relates, in general, to communication systems, and, in particular, it is a sonar system for communicating and navigating within a subaqueous medium. In even greater particularity, the invention is a binaural sonar system combined with a face mask in such unique manner that it facilitates the communication, target search, navigation, and homing operations of swimmers and divers operating within waters which would otherwise constitute adverse environmental conditions.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PRIOR ART I-Ieretofore, numerous sonar and underwater com munication systems have been employed by swimmers, divers, and various and sundry manned and unmanned underwater vehicles. For some purposes, they have proven to be quite satisfactory; however, for swimmerdiver communication, homing, and navigation purposes, they usually leave a great deal to be desired.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION The instant invention overcomes many of the disadvantages of the prior art, in that it enables underwater swimmers to communicate intelligibly in a manner that is somewhat similar, as far as psychological and physiological experiences are concerned, to normal talking and hearing in an atmospheric environment by a human being.
It is, therefore, an object of this invention to provide an improved underwater sonic communication system.
Another object of this invention is to provide an improved echo-search-ranging system.
Still another object of this invention is to provide an improved sonar system in which the output thereof is produced as enhanced binaural signals which provide bearing information of received acoustical energy when listened to by human ears.
A further object of this invention is to provide an acoustical communication system having an improved signal-to-noise ratio.
Another object of this invention is to provide an improved underwater communication and face mask combination which will essentially free a swimmerdiver from the burden of large, heavy, cumbersome, communication apparatus, thereby allowing said swimmer-diver considerably greater freedom of movement and complete freedom of hand use within sea water or the like.
A further object of this invention is to provide an improved method and means for localizing the source of various and sundry underwater sounds.
Still another object of this invention is to provide a method and means for improving the binaural capabilities as a result of incorporating both amplitude and phase discrimination techniques in an underwater communication system.
Another object of this invention is to provide restoration of binaural hearing and acoustical signal localization abilities to an individual operating in an otherwise acoustical signal diffusing environmental medium, such as pressurized helium, sea water, or the like.
Another object of this invention is to provide an improved voice activated underwater communication system.
Another object of this invention is to provide an underwater communication system that is easily and economically manufactured, operated, and maintained.
Other objects and many of the attendant advantages will be readily appreciated as the subject invention be comes better understood by reference to the following detailed description, when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING FIG. I is a schematic elevational view of the transmitter portion of the subject invention mounted in and in cooperative association with a swimmer-diver face mask;
FIG. 2 is a schematic perspective view of headset and earphone arrangements employed which constitutes the receiver portion in the subject invention;
FIG. 3 is a block diagram of the swimmer-diver underwater communication system of this invention; and
FIG. 4 is a graphical representation of the acoustical response patterns of the receiving hydrophones of the instant invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT Referring now to FIG. 1, there is shown a face mask 11 of the type which is typically worn by swimmers and divers. Obviously, many different face masks, divers helmets, etc., are commercially available, and anyone thereof may be employed as a component of this invention, as long as it allows freedom of lip and jaw movements, has sufficient room in it to allow emplacement of the transmitting and/or receiving apparatus therein, and meets the physiological requirements of the swimmer-diver.
Preferably, the acoustic frequency response of the speaking cavity of face mask Ill should be determined under all environmental conditions, so that it may be frequency compensated both electronically and mechanically so that the overall system will have as flat a frequency response as possible and, thus, enhance communication intelligibility. As a general rule, however, it has been found that most conventional face masks have a 6 db per octave signal attenuation or downslope, with a resonant peak somewhere between 500 and 1,000 Hz. Therefore, it is necessary to compensate for such downslope, if optimum operation is to be obtained. Such compensation is accomplished within the transmitter electronics portion 12 of the invention, as will be discussed more fully subsequently.
So as to make the subject system self-contained, a rechargeable battery pack 13 is deployed within mask 11 and is connected to encased electronics portion 112 by means of intercabling l4. Intercabling 14, in addition to supplying power to the electronic circuitry, also transmits electrical signals from a transmitter 15 a part of said electronics circuitry 14 to a broadcasting electroacoustical transducer 16 located on the other side of the face mask, in this particular instance. Disposed in cable 14 is a connector 17, which enables transmitter 15 to automatically be turned off merely by breaking the electrical circuit thereat. It is preferably an Electro Oceanics 59F2F-l connector that can be connected and disconnected underwater.
All, of the foregoing elements 12 through 17 are housed in such manner in any suitable containers as would be necessary to provide water and pressure proofness. Details of such housing or containers are not disclosed specifically herewith because it would be well within the purview of one skilled in the art having the benefit of the teachings presented herein to make and use whatever ones thereof would be required for any given operational circumstances. Of course, they may be epoxy coated to insure waterproofness, if desired.
A microphone 18 is also included within face mask 11. It, too, must be both pressure and waterproof. In this particular instance, it has been found, for example, that a three-quarter inch diameter ceramic bimorph connected in series, potted in any suitable potting compound, such as, for example, a self-leveling silicone rubber compound, and encased in a neoprene cup is quite satisfactory as microphone 18, inasmuch as such element has approximately a 6 db per octave upslope and will, thus, help compensate for the aforementioned downslope of mask 11. Also, it is relatively distortion free from 300 Hz to 6,000 Hz, thereby having a bandwidth that is the minimum allowable to capture optimum speech intelligibility, especially when the speech spectrum is upshifted in frequency, due to a high pressure water or helium gas ambient environment. Of course, any other suitable microphone may be employed as microphone 18, if so desired by the artisan or the swimmer-diver.
An external connector 19 provides a preamplified speech output for use by voice recorders, wire communication systems, and other external and/or remote systems, requiring voice input (not shown and not a part of this invention).
FIG. 2 shows a headset 20 which preferably includes the receiver circuitry 21 of the subject system, the electronics of which will be discussed more fully below. Disclosed is a pair of receiver channels which are signal processors for the ears of the swimmer-diver, respectively. Hence, headset 20 contains a right ear receiver channel 22 and a left ear receiver channel 23, each of which includes substantially similar receiver channel components that are interconnected by a unique binaural amplitude enhancement circuit that may be physically disposed in the housing of either one thereof (or optionally within the electronics portion of the aforesaid face mask 1 1, if so desired). Said receiver channels will be discussed in greater detail in'conjunction with FIG. 3.
Receiver channels 22 and 23 are, in this particular embodiment, respectively encased in any suitable pressure proof, waterproof housings 24 and 25. They include receiving hydrophones 26 and 27, respectively, which are mounted on the outer sides thereof for diametrically opposed response to incoming acoustical energy which, thus, effectively impacts thereon from opposite directions, just as the ears do for any given human being. As will be explained in better detail subsequently, such opposite directional response characteristics play an important part in enabling the swimmer-diver to localize and determine the direction from which a sound is coming within water, sea water, or the like something which, in actual practice is exceedingly difficult to do.
The inside surfaces of receiver channels 22 and 23 constitute earphones 28 and 29, respectively, and, of course, they are adapted for fitting firrnly against the ears of the swimmer-diver.
A headpiece 31 interconnects both receiver channels both electrically and physically and enables the receiver to be properly and conventionally mounted on the swimmers head. As will be discussed more fully in conjunction with FIG. 3, a unique binaural enhancement circuit (not shown in FIG. 2) is appropriately connected between the receiver channels; consequently, it may be physically located anywhere in headset 20 that would be structurally and electrically convenient.
A pair of external connectors 32 and 33 are optionally mounted on the receiver channels, in order to connect external and perhaps remote recording equip ment thereto.
Referring now to FIG. 3, wherein the elements disclosed are indicated by the same reference numerals as employed in the disclosure thereon in FIGS. 1 and 2, insofar as it is possible and practical. Disclosed is the aforesaid single sideband transmitter 15 which, of course, may be incorporated as a portion of electronics 12 in swimmer-diver face mask 11. Included therein and also preferably mounted in face mask 11 is the aforementioned microphone 18, the output of which is connected to the input of a 6,000 I-Iz low pass filter 42, employed for the purpose of eliminating external noise above the desired human speech band of, say, from 300 to 6,000 Hz and to provide approximately a 6 db per octave signal upslope or enhancement, to fully compensate for the 6 db per octave signal attenuation or downslope inherently caused by the face mask.
The output of low pass filter 42 is connected to the input of an adjustable gain preamplifier 43, which is preferably designed in such manner that a flat frequency response occurs within the transmitter portion of the invention. The output of preamplifier 43 is connected to one of the inputs of a balanced modulator 44 and the input of an input signal actuated switch which, in this particular case, effectively operates as a selective activator filter and voice'operated switch (VOX') As would be obvious to one skilled in the art, voice operated switch 45, as it is presently connected to its associated components, is, in fact, actuated by the electrical signal equivalent of the human voice after it has been properly filtered and amplified. Such arrangement has beenemployed for' two reasons: (1) spurious ambient'signals will not pass through low pass filter 42, which prevents inadvertent transmission by the transmitter from being effected by signals other than the divers voice; and (2) the transmitter will not be actuated by changes in ambient pressure, in the event the diver changes water depths. Of course, the voice operated switch should be conventionally designed to be inoperative below a given threshold or voice volume and selective to only diver voice signatures, thereby preventing the broadcasting of such undesirable and noise producing signals as diver breathing and movement signals and water bubble sounds. Any commercially available or conventional voice operated switch means having the above mentioned operational characteristics may be employed as voice operated switch 45 in the subject invention.
The other input of balanced modulator 44 is connected to the output of an 8.087 KHz local oscillator 46, which may or may not be considered as being part of transmitter 15. Since local oscillator 46 is used as the heterodyning signal generator for both the transmitter and the receiver in this preferred embodiment, it is considered as being separate from each thereof. However, it should be understood that both the transmitter and the receiver may have their own individual local oscillator, if so desired, as long as the signal frequencies thereof are identical.
On the other hand, local oscillator 46 alone is incorporated in this disclosed preferred embodiment of the invention because it has been determined that so doing enhances the phase aspect of the binaural characteristics produced thereby as a result of using a common carrier frequency in both demodulators which cause the demodulated output signals therefrom to retain any phase differences between the receiver channels.
The output of balanced modulator 44 is connected to the data signal input of a gate 47, the control input of which is connected to the output of voice operated switch 45. In this particular instance, gate 47 is a voltage controlled gate which is normally closed but is opened whenever a predetermined voltage signal is supplied to the control input thereof as a result of switch 45 being effectively opened by the speech of the swimmer-diver. Of course, switch 45 is actually opened by the filtered and amplified electrical signal that is proportional to the acoustical speech signal supplied to microphone 18 minus any spurious signals, such as, for instance, breathing sounds, and the like. But when it is opened thereby, the actuating signal also effectively passes through switch 45 and then becomes the gate control signal which, in turn, effects the opening thereof, so that the output signal from balanced modulator 44 can pass therethrough. Obviously, such switch and gate operations occur simultaneously and instantaneously, for all practical purposes.
The output of gate 47 is connected to the input of a bandpass filter 48, in order to eliminate the lower sideband output signals effectively supplied thereto from modulator 44, and the output of filter 48, in turn, connected with a power amplifier 49 to the input of electroacoustical transducer 16 adapted for broadcasting the aforesaid modified speech signals throughout the subaqucous medium, such as water, sea water, or the like, within which the swimmer-diver is submerged or throughout any other predetermined suitable environmental medium. Of course, said modified speech signals are, in fact, the communication signals which allows one diver to talk to another diver having similar transmitting and receiving apparatus while both are under water.
A receiver system 21 is used to receive the talk signals of substantially comparable frequencies and qualities from other divers, as suggested above. It contains the aforementioned pair of signal processing channels 22 and 23 which are adopted for supplying said speech signals to the ears of a diver, respectively. However, as will be explained in greater detail subsequently, they do it in such manner as to uniquely improve the binaural characteristics thereof and, thus, enable a diver to localize and determine the direction from which talk signals are coming, even though the entire communications system constituting this invention may have been miniaturized or compacted by the employment of solid state or other suitable manufacturing techniques to the extent that it is combined with the divers face mask and be in proximity with his head and ears.
Receiver channel 22 includes the aforesaid electroacoustical hydrophone 26, the output of which is con nected through a preamplifier 56 to the input of bandpass filter 57 of the type that is similar to the aforesaid bandpass filter 48 in transmitter 15. The output of filter 57 is connected to the data signal input of an adjustable gain amplifier 58, the gain of which is adjusted in proportion with whatever voltage signal is supplied to the gain control input thereof.
The output of amplifier 58 is connected to one of the inputs of a demodulator 59, with the other input thereof being connected to the output of the aforementioned local oscillator 46. Again, as previously suggested, if so desired, receiver 211 may be selfcontained and have its own local oscillator, as long as the signal frequency thereof is identical to that supplied to balanced modulator 44 in transmitter 115. Of course, as will be explained more fully below, demodulator 59 heterodynes the incoming modified speech signal down to its original frequency range of between 300 and 6,000 l-lz, so that it will be intelligible when received by the divers ear. For effecting such processing, a low pass filter 61 is connected to the output of demodulator 59, in order that said diver only receives the lower side band output that is, said 300 to 6,000 Hz talk signals therefrom. The output of low pass filter 61 is connected through a power amplifier 62 to the input of the aforesaid earphone 28, which, as previously indicated, is physically disposed in contiguous relationship with one of the divers ears, so that the diver may hear the talk signals emanating therefrom while he is working in an underwater environment.
In every respect, receiver channel 23 should be as identical as possible to receiver channel 22; therefore, the components thereof are substantially identical to the above described components of said channel 22, respectively. As a result of such arrangement, the aforesaid hydrophone 27, a preamplifier 65, a bandpass filter 66, a variable gain amplifier 67, a balanced demodulator 68, a low pass filter 59, a power amplifier 71, and the aforesaid earphone 29' are connected in series in the same manner as the components comparable thereto were series connected in channel 22.
The aforementioned binaural characteristics are considerably improved in the subject invention by a simple but unique binaural enhancement circuit 73 which is connected to receiver channels 22 and 23. Said binaural enhancement circuit 73 includes a summing amplifier 74 having a pair of inputs which are connected to the outputs of the aforesaid variable gain amplifiers 58 and 67 of receiver channels 22 and 23, respectively.
The output of summing amplifier 74 is connected to the input of a direct current (DC) voltage peak detector 75, the output of which is connected to the gain control inputs of said variable gain amplifiers 58 and 67.
FIG. 4 depicts schematically the top of the head of a diver 81 (otherwise not shown), with right and left hydrophones 26 and 27 physically located in association therewith in such manner that the respective response patterns are oppositely directed cardioid patterns 82 and 83, mathematically defined by the expressions l cos and 1 cos 0, respectively. Also, in this particular embodiment, said hydrophones are preferably designed so that the outer cardioid radius (2A), as measured from the center of diver head 81, is twice the distance (A) of their radius of intersection, likewise measured from the center of diver head 81. As will be explained more fully below, such structural arrangement and dispositions of receiving hydrophones further enhance the discernment of the diver, as far as the direction of incoming sound is concerned. Thus, in conjunction with signal enhancement circuit 73 discussed above, the listening characteristics of a swimmer-diver working underwater are more nearly the same as they would be if he were working in the atmosphere with only his ears as the sound receptors.
At this time, it would perhaps be noteworthy that the subject invention is primarily intended to facilitate the operation of a diver within water and within considerable depths thereof; however, it should be understood that it may also be used to an advantage in other environmental mediums such as, for instance, pressurized helium if so desired and designed therefor by one skilled in the art having the benefit of the teachings presented herewith.
It should also be understood that all of the various and sundry components of this invention are well known and conventional per se, and some thereof may have been patented in their own right at some time in the past. Therefore, it is their interconnection and interactions that effect the new combinations of elements constituting this invention and cause the stated improved results and objectives to be achieved thereby.
' MODE OF OPERATION The operation of the invention will now be discussed briefly in conjunction with all of the figures of the drawing.
A swimmer-diver wears the face mask and headset disclosed in FIGS. 1 and 2. Hence, he can speak into the transmitter and hear from the receiver portions thereof without carrying additional apparatus or without requiring the use of his hands. This, of course, is very advantageous, because the diver is not handicapped by the unwieldy burden of an undue load and,
furthermore, has his hands free to do whatever work he desires to do. Moreover, even though he is working in an underwater environment that is, at least, unnatural and perhaps hostile to him, he is considerably less disoriented and can, thus, navigate more easily therein than he otherwise could without the benefit of the subject invention. In addition, this arrangement allows complete and natural feedback of the divers voice to occur and, hence, facilitates improved speech formation which, in turn, further enhances intelligibility.
Perhaps, at the outset, thesignificance of the unique transmitter and receiver systems 15 and 21 depicted in FIGS should again be mentioned. As may readily be seen from inspection thereof, as a result of both thereof using the same local oscillator 46 and, hence, being heterodyned with the same frequency signal having the same polarity at any given instant transmitter 15 and receiver 21 are effectively interconnected and are, hence, perfectly synchronized, and
may thus be considered to be a unique transmitreceive system in the disclosed preferred embodiment. However, if they are identical, two independent local oscillators may be employed, if so desired. In such case, both transmitter 15 and receiver 21 could be considered as being self-contained units.
As seen from FIG. 1, microphone 18 is located in proximity with the divers mouth, so that he may speak into it without undue effort. Microphone l8 conven-- tionally converts the acoustical energy of the divers voice into a proportional electrical speech signal that is processed by 6,000 Hz low pass filter 42 to remove all external noise above the speech band, as well as other spurious and feedback signals. Then, the output is amplified by preamplifier 43 to provide a 6 db per octave upslope for face mask downslope compensation purposes, thereby effecting a substantially flat frequency response which enhances signal intelligibility. The filtered and preamplified speech signal falls within approximately the 300 to 6,000 Hz frequency band and is then heterodyned with an 8.087 KHZ signal from oscillator 46. At the same time, a predetermined frequency signature portion thereof passes through selective filter and VOX 45 and opens gate 47 to let the heterodyned output signal from balanced modulator 44 pass therethrough. The output from modulator 44 consists of the upper and lower side bands having frequencies of 8-14 KHz and 2-8 KHz, respectively. In order to provide improved intelligibility, a 6,000 Hz speech bandwidth is maintained throughout the subject system; therefore, only the 8-14 KHz upper side band is passed through band pass filter 48, after which it is amplified by power amplifier 49 and braodcast or projected into the ambient water by transmitting transducer 16.
Obviously, speech transmission is primarily intended for receipt by another diver, but because receiver 21 remains on constantly so as to require no external cabling or controls the speaking diver receives his own speech signals, which he can hear as a result of the processing thereof by his own receiver, namely, in this particular instance, receiver 21. Of course, it should also be obvious that all of the communicating divers must wear one of the subject communication systems, if actual communication of the speaking-hearing type is to occur.
Receiver 21, as illustrated in FIG. 3, receives the incoming speech signals by means of hydrophones 26 and 27 of receiver channels 22 and 23, respectively. Because both of said receiver channels internally process the received signals in the same manner, only channel 22 will be described, in order to keep this disclosure as simple as possible.
When the 8-14 KI-Iz acoustical speech signals are received from within the ambient water environment, they are transduced into electrical signals proportional thereto by hydrophone 26 (say, the right hydrophone, in this case), after which they are amplified to a more useful level by preamplifier 56. After such amplification, they are filtered by 8-14 KHz bandpass filter 57,
in order to delete spurious signals outside the 8-I4 KHz band that may exist therein, thereby improving the signal-to-noise ratio thereof. The filtered output speech signals from filter 57 are then amplified an appropriate amount as determined by signal enhancement circuit 73, to be explained shortly by variable gain amplifier 58 before being heterodyned down to the original speech frequency range of from 300 to 6,000 Hz by balanced demodulator 59 and oscillator 46. Then said original speech frequency output signals from demodulator 59 are filtered by 6,000 Hz low pass filter to insure passage of audible speech signals only before being amplified to a more useful level by power amplifier 62 and supplied to the divers ear say, the right ear, in this particular instance by earphone 28. The aforesaid power amplifier 62 is preferably designed to compensate for any signal attenuation caused by the downslope of frequency response inherently introduced by the aforementioned earphone 28 and the human ear being immersed in water.
Due to certain acoustic considerations, a human ear immersed in water loses some of its ability to localize the source of underwater sounds. This invention restores such ability to the swimmer-diver by means of signal amplitude enhancement and discrimination techniques which, in effect, improve the binaural aspects thereof. In this invention such binaural effects are improved by two separate and distinct structural entities, which, although operative individually, combine associatively to produce results that are superior to either one used alone or both thereof merely added to gether.
One such entity is signal enhancement circuit 73 in combination with adjustable gain amplifiers 58 and 67 of receiver channels 22 and 23. As mentioned previously, channels 22 and 23 are substantially identical in structure and operation; therefore, the analysis of channel 23 will not be belabored herein. However, it would appear to be noteworthy at this time (for purpose of emphasis) that the amplification characteristic curves of amplifiers 58 and 67 should be as identical as possible, if optimum performance is to be obtained from the overall invention. The outputs of adjustable gain amplifiers 58 and 67 are supplied to the inputs of summing amplifier 74 which, in turn, produces a composite output signal that is proportional to the addition of the voltages thereof. This composite signal is then peak detected, so as to produce a direct current (DC) control voltage signal that is proportional to peak thereof, and such peak DC control signal is supplied to the control inputs of amplifiers 58 and 67 for appropriate regulation of the gain thereof. In this particular case, amplifiers 58 and 67 should be designed by the artisan to be decreased in gain for an increase in the composite gain control signal and vice versa.
From the foregoing, it may readily be inferred that if the incoming speech signal originates at a point directly in front of the diver, it will be amplified the same amount in amplifiers 58 and 67 and the divers ears will hear signals of equal intensity and of the same phase. On the other hand, in the event the source of the incoming speech signals is to the right or left of the diver, the speech signals received by the divers right or left ear will be stronger and a phase difference will exist proportional to the degree of offset from center of the source and its frequencies, depending upon which direction they come. For example, if the sonic signal source say, another diver 85 that is speaking is to the right of the receiving or hearing diver, hydrophone 26 (as best seen in FIG. 4) will receive a higher power signal than hydrophone 27 because it is closer thereto and because said hydrophones are directionally oriented for acoustical response in diametrically opposed directions. In such instance, if, for example, after cardioid response pattern compensation a6 4 volt signal 84 were sensed by hydrophone 26 and the same signal had attenuated to a 5 volt signal by the time it was sensed by hydrophone 27, then, when both signals were amplified an equal amount say, for example, by 11 the right ear would hear a signal proportional to a 66 volt signal and the left car would receive a signal proportional to a 55 volt signal, with the voltage difference therebetween being 1 1 volts instead of 1 volt. Such increase in intensity in the right ear of the diver would immediately alert him that the speech signals that he was receiving were coming from his right. Accordingly, binaural enhancement is achieved in water, in proportion to the addition of the received signals which facilitates ascertaining the signal source direction or hearing. This, in turn, makes it easier for a diver to retain his orientation, even though he and the person or persons with whom he is communicating may be working in the dark in deep or turbid water.
As previously suggested, whenever incoming speech or other signals arrive from the left or the right of the listening diver, the phase thereof is delayed at the hydrophone that receives it last, as a result of their greater travel distance in an aqueous medium. In addition, the effective intensity differences of the received signals are enhanced by the respective hydrophone cardioid response patterns which, in turn, are arranged in diametrically opposed dispositions as a result of the opposite orientations of the hydrophones themselves on the head of the diver, as previously mentioned. Such arrangement and evidence of response patterns can best be seen in FIG. 4, wherein response pattern 82 of hydrophone 26 is depicted graphically and is mathematically defined by the expression 1 cos 0, where 6 is the angle measured around the center (C) of diver head 81, and wherein response pattern 83 of hydrophone 27 is depicted graphically and is mathematically defined by the expression 1 cos 6, where 6 is again the angle measured around the center (C) of diver head 81. Thus, it may be seen that if speech signals 84 are being received from a speech source 85 to the right of the front of diver 811, hydrophone 26 would produce an output signal that is proportional in intensity to RC, while hydrophone 27 would produce an output signal that is proportional in intensity to LC, and because RC is greater than LC, the output signal voltage from right hydrophone 26 would be greater than the output signal voltage from left hydrophone 27. Such voltage differences, of course, enhance the binaural aspect of the invention, thereby effectively simulating the normal hearing characteristics of a human being.
In view of the foregoing, ostensively it should be evident that the instant swimmer-diver communications system constitutes an advancement in the art and that, to some extent, it achieves objectives heretofore unattainable. Accordingly, it is a new and exceedingly useful method and means for enabling intelligible communication to occur between people: and/or other beings response to human speech or other transmitted sound.
Concomitantly with the above, as previously suggested, it would perhaps be noteworthy that it is possible to use the invention as an active or passive sonar system, wherein the transmitter broadcasts certain speech or other signals as target search signals that are received as target echo signals by the receiver, which,
in turn, are then interpreted by the diver as to whether or not a target has been acquired and, if so, the relative 'bearing thereof, or he may merely listen to or home on v an incoming sonic signal.
Obviously, other embodiments and modifications of the subject invention will readily come to the mind of one skilled in the art having the benefit of the teachings presented in the foregoing description and the drawings. It is, therefore, to be understood that this invention is not to be limited thereto and that said modifications and embodiments are intended to be included within the scope of the appended claims.
What is claimed is:
l. A communications system, comprising in combination:
a heterodyne transmitter for broadcasting a first signal within a first predetermined frequency range throughout a predetermined environmental medium',
means connected to said transmitter for effecting the actuation thereof in response to a second signal within a second predetermined frequency range;
a heterodyne receiver, having a pair of receiving channels, each of which includes a voltage controlled amplifier, contiguously disposed with said heterodyne receiver, for receiving signals within said first predetermined frequency range and heterodyning them back within said second frequency range; and
means connected between the outputs and control inputs of the voltage controlled amplifiers of said pairs of receiving channels for regulating the respective amplifications thereof in proportion to the peak of the sum of the output signals from said voltage controlled amplifiers.
2. The device of claim 1, wherein said communication system is a binaural underwater communication system, and wherein said predetermined environmental medium is water.
3. The device of claim 1, wherein said communication system is a binaural underwater communication system, wherein said predetermined environmental medium is water, and wherein said second signal within a second predetermined frequency is a signal that is generated by and proportional to the sonic energy-produced by the human voice.
4. The device of claim 1, wherein said heterodyne transmitter comprises:
a microphone;
a low pass filter connected to the output of said microphone;
a balanced modulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof effectively connected to the output of said low pass filter;
a normally closed gate having a data signal input, a
control signal input,'and an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said balanced modulator, and with the control signal input thereof adapted for effecting the opening thereof in response to a control signal within a predetermined frequency range;
a band pass filter connected to the output of said normally closed gate; and
a transmitting transducer effectively connected to the output of said band pass filter 5. The device of claim 1, wherein said heterodyne transmitter comprises:
a microphone;
a low pass filter connected to the output of said microphone;
a balanced modulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof effectively connected to the output of said low pass filter;
a normally closed gate having a data signal input, a control signal input, and an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said balanced modulator, and with the control signal input thereof adapted for effecting the opening thereof in response to a control signal within a predetermined frequency range;
a band pass filter connected to the output of said normally closed gate;
a transmitting transducer effectively connected to the output of said band pass filter; and
a local oscillator connected to the other input of said balanced modulator.
6. The device of claim 1, wherein said heterodyne transmitter comprises:
a microphone;
a low pass filter connected to the output of said microphone;
a balanced modulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof effectively connected to the output of said low pass filter;
a normally closed gate having a data signal input, a control signal input, and an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said balanced modulator, and with the control signal input thereof adapted for effecting the opening thereof in response to a control signal within a predetermined frequency range;
a band pass filter connected to the output of said normally closed gate;
a transmitting transducer effectively connected to the output of said band pass filter;
a local oscillator connected to the other input of said balanced modulator; and
means effectively connected between the output of said low pass filter and the voltage control input of the aforesaid normally closed gate for effecting the opening thereof in response to the signal received from the output of said low pass filter.
7. The device of claim 1, wherein said heterodyne transmitter comprises:
a microphone;
a low pass filter connected to the output of said microphone;
a balanced modulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof effectively connected to the output of said low pass filter;
a normally closed gate having a data signal input, a 'control signal input, and an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said balanced modulator, and with the control signal input thereof adapted for effecting the opening thereof in response to a control signal within a predetermined frequency range;
a band pass filter connected to the output of said normally closed gate;
a transmitting transducer effectively connected to the output of said band pass filter; and
means effectively connected between the output of said low pass filter and the voltage control input of the aforesaid normally closed gate for effecting the opening thereof in response to the signal received from the output of said low pass filter.
8. The device of claim 1, wherein said means connected between the outputs and control inputs of the voltage control amplifiers of said pairs of receiving channels for regulating the respective amplifications thereof in proportion to the peak of the sum of the output signals from said voltage controlled amplifiers comprises:
a summing amplifier having a pair of inputs and an output, with the inputs thereof respectively con nected to the outputs of said voltage controlled amplifiers; and
a direct current peak detector connected between the output of said summing amplifier and the control inputs of said voltage control amplifiers.
9. The invention of claim ll, further characterized by -a face mask means surrounding said communication system for the housing thereof therein when said face mask means is worn bya swimmer-diver.
10. The invention of claim ll, further characterized by a face mask means surrounding the transmitter and transmitter actuation means of said communication system for the housing thereof therein when said face mask means is worn by a swimmer-diver.
11. The invention of claim ll, further characterized by a local oscillator connected to said heterodyne transmitter and each of said pair of receiving channels of said heterodyne receiver for supplying a predetermined heterodying signal thereto.
12. The device of claim 1, wherein each of said pair of receiving channels of the aforesaid heterodyne receiver comprises:
a receiving hydrophone;
a band pass filter effectively connected to the output of said receiving hydrophone;
a voltage controlled amplifier having a data signal input, a control input, and an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said band pass filter, and with the control input responsive to a voltage control signal;
a balanced demodulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof connected to the output of said voltage controlled amplifier;
a low pass filter connected to the output of said balanced demodulator; and
an earphone effectively connected to the output of the aforesaid low pass filter.
13. The device of claim 12, wherein the hydrophones of said pair of receiving channels are physically disposed in such diametrically opposed manner as to be responsive to acoustical energy arriving thereat from predominantly opposite directions.
14. The device of claim 12, wherein the hydrophones of said pair of receiving channels are physically disposed in such manner as to be responsive to acoustical energy arriving thereat from within similar oppositely directed cardioid response patterns.
15. An underwater communication system, comprising in combination:
a microphone;
a first low pass filter connected to the output of said microphone;
a first preamplifier connected to the output of said low pass filter;
a balanced modulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof connected to the output of said first preamplifier;
a gate having a data signal input, a control input, and
an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said balanced modulator;
a voice operated switch connected between the output of the aforesaid first preamplifier and the control input of said gate;
a first band pass filter connected to the output of said gate first power amplifier connected to the output of said first band pass filter;
a transmitting transducer connected to the output of said first power amplifier;
a first hydrophone;
a second preamplifier connected to the output of said hydrophone;
a second band pass filter connected to the output of said second preamplifier;
a first voltage controlled amplifier having a data signal input, a control input, and an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said second band pass filter;
a first balanced demodulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof connected to the output of said first voltage controlled amplifier;
second low pass filter connected to the output of said first balanced demodulator;
a second power amplifier connected to the output of said second low pass filter;
a first earphone connected to the output of said sec ond power amplifier;
a second hydrophone;
a third preamplifier connected to the output of said second hydrophone;
third band pass filter connected to the output of said third preamplifier;
second voltage controlled amplifier having a data signal input, a control input, and an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said third band pass filter;
second balanced demodulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof connected to the output of said second voltage controlled amplifier;
a third low pass filter connected to the output of said second balanced demodulator;
a third power amplifier connected to the output of said third low pass filter;
a second earphone connected to the output of said third power amplifier;
an oscillator connected to the other inputs of said first and second balanced demodulators and the aforesaid balanced modulator;
a summing amplifier having a pair of inputs and an output, with the inputs thereof respectively connected to the outputs of said first and second voltage controlled amplifiers; and
a direct current voltage peak detector having an input and an output, with the input thereof connected to the output of said summing amplifier, and with the output thereof connected to the control inputs of the aforesaid first and second voltage controlled amplifiers.
16. The invention of claim 15, further characterized by means for housing said underwater communication system in a waterproof manner and in contiguous disposition with the mouth and ears of an underwater swimmer-diver.
UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE CERTIFICATE ()F CORRECTION Patent 3.789.353 Dated January 29. mm
Inventor) Earl K. Hunter and Don G. Smith It is certified that error appears in the aboire-identified patent and that said Letters Patent are hereby corrected as shown below:
In the Sgecification Column 2, line ll, delete the word -'-and--.
Qolumn 2, line ll after the word "maintained" and before the period, insert the term and transoorted- Column 2, line 38, between the words "and" and "anyone", insert the term --,thus,--. I
Column 4, line 6, delete the term " receiver channels 22 and 23" and substitute the term - housings 24 and 25-- therefor. I
Column 4, line 8, between the words "the" and "ears", insert the term --right and left--.
Column 4, line 9, between the term "swimmer-diver and the period, insertithe term respectively--.
In the Drawing In FIG. 3. change the legend of element 65 from "PWR AMP" to --PRE-AMPQ-.
In FIG. 4, near the intersection of cardioid response pattern 83 and sneech siqnal84, insertuan -v-L,--,.v t
Signed and sealed this 5rd day of December" 197A (SEAL) Attest: MCCOY M. GIBSON JR. C. MARSHALL DANN Attesting Ojficer Commissioner of Patents FORM PO-IOSO (10-69) USCOMWDC 60376 p69 Q .5. GOVEINHENT PRIMTUHF OFFICE 1 959 U-l66-Sl4 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE CERTIFICATE OF CORRECTION Pat n N 3,789.3 53 I Dated Jams 29. mm
Inventor) Earl K. Hunter and Don G. Smith It is certified that error appears in the above-identified patent and that said' Letters Patent are hereby corrected as shown below:
In the Specification Column 2, line ll, delete the word -and--.
Qolumn 2, line ll after the word 'maintained" and before the period, insert the term and transborted--. I
Column2 line 38 between the words and and' anyone", insert the term --,thus,--. 7
Column 4, line 6, delete the term "receiver channels 22 and 23' and substitute the term "housings 24 and 25- therefor.
Column 4, line 8, between the words the" and "ears", insert the term --right and left--. I I i v Column 4, line 9, between the term "swimmer-diver" and the period, insertthe term respectively--.
- In the Drawing In FIG. '3. change the legend of element 65 from "PwR AMP" to --PRE-AMP- In FIG. 4, near the intersection of cardioid response pattern 83 and speech siqnwal 84, .insert'an, -.-LV.--s..
Signed and sealed this-5rd day of Deoemb'er"l97 (SEAL) Attest: MCCOY M. GIBSON JR. c MARSHALL DANN Attesting Of ficer Commissioner' of Patents FORM PO-IOSO (10-69) Q 'uscoMM-oc 60376 P69 1 I i U.S.'GOVINMENT PIINIINIS OFFICE: l9! 0-469!!!

Claims (16)

1. A communications system, comprising in combination: a heterodyne transmitter for broadcasting a first signal within a first predetermined frequency range throughout a predetermined environmental medium; means connected to said transmitter for effecting the actuation thereof in response to a second signal within a second predetermined frequency range; a heterodyne receiver, having a pair of receiving channels, each of which includes a voltage controlled amplifier, contiguously disposed with said heterodyne receiver, for receiving signals within said first predetermined frequency range and heterodyning them back within said second frequency range; and means connected between the outputs and control inputs of the voltage controlled amplifiers of said pairs of receiving channels for regulating the respective amplifications thereof in proportion to the peak of the sum of the output signals from said voltage controlled amplifiers.
2. The device of claim 1, wherein said communication system is a binaural underwater communication system, and wherein said predetermined environmental medium is water.
3. The device of claim 1, wherein said communication system is a binaural underwater communication system, wherein said predetermined environmental medium is water, and wherein said second signal within a second predetermined frequency is a signal that is generated by and proportional to the sonic energy produced by the human voice.
4. The device of claim 1, wherein said heterodyne transmitter comprises: a microphone; a low pass filter connected to the output of said microphone; a balanced modulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof effectively connected to the output of said low pass filter; a normally closed gate having a data signal input, a control signal input, and an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said balanced modulator, and with the control signal input thereof adapted for effecting the opening thereof in response to a control signal within a predetermined frequency range; a band pass filter connected to the output of said normally closed gate; and a transmitting transducer effectively connected to the output of said band pass filter.
5. The device of claim 1, wherein said heterodyne transmitter comprises: a microphone; a low pass filter connected to the output of said microphone; a balanced modulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof effectively connected to the output of said low pass filter; a normally closed gate having a data signal input, a control signal input, and an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said balanced modulator, and with the control signal input thereof adapted for effecting the opening thereof in response to a control signal within a predetermined frequency range; a band pass filter connected to the output of said normally closed gate; a transmitting transducer effectively connected to the output of said band pass filter; and a local oscillator connected to the other input of said balanced modulator.
6. The device of claim 1, wherein said heterodyne transmitter comprises: a microphone; a low pass filter connected to the output of said microphone; a balanced modulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof effectively connected to the output of said low pass filter; a normally closed gate having a data signal input, a control signal input, and an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said balanced modulator, and with the control signal input thereof adapted for effecting the opening thereof in response to a control signal within a predetermined frequency range; a band pass filter connected to the output of said normally closed gate; a transmitting transducer effectively connected to the output of said band pass filter; a local oscillator connected to the other input of said balanced modulator; and means effectively connected between the output of said low pass filter and the voltage control input of the aforesaid normally closed gate for effecting the opening thereof in response to the signal received from the output of said low pass filter.
7. The device of claim 1, wherein said heterodyne transmitter comprises: a microphone; a low pass filter connected to the output of said microphone; a balanced modulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof effectively connected to the output of said low pass filter; a normally closed gate having a data signal input, a control signal input, and an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said balanced modulator, and with the control signal input thereof adapted for effecting the opening thereof in response to a control signal within a predetermined frequency range; a band pass filter connected to the output of said normally closed gate; a transmitting transducer effectively connected to the output of said band pass filter; and means effectively connected between the output of said low pass filter and the voltage control input of the aforesaid normally closed gate for effecting the opening thereof in response to the signal received from the output of said low pass filter.
8. The device of claim 1, wherein said means connected between the outputs and control inputs of the voltage control amplifiers of said pairs of receiving channels for regulating the respective amplifications thereof in proportion to the peak of the sum of the output signals from said voltage controlled amplifiers comprises: a summing amplifier having a pair of inputs and an output, with the inputs thereof respectively connected to the outputs of said voltage controlled amplifiers; and a direct current peak detector connected between the output of said summing amplifier and the control inputs of said voltage control amplifiers.
9. The invention of claim 1, further characterized by a face mask means surrounding said communication system for the housing thereof therein when said face mask means is worn by a swimmer-diver.
10. The invention of claim 1, further characterized by a face mask means surrounding the transmitter and transmitter actuation means of said communication system for the housing thereof therein when said face mask means is worn by a swimmer-diver.
11. The invention of claim 1, further characterized by a local oscillator connected to said heterodyne transmitter and each of said pair of receiving channels of said heterodyne receiver for supplying a predetermined heterodying signal thereto.
12. The device of claim 1, wherein each of said pair of receiving channels of the aforesaid heterodyne receiver comprises: a receiving hydrophone; a band pass filter effectively connected to the output of said receiving hydrophone; a voltage controlled amplifier having a data signal input, a control input, and an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said band pass filter, and with the control input responsive to a voltage control signal; a balanced demodulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof connected to the output of said voltage controlled amplifier; a low pass filter connected to the output of said balanced demodulator; and an earphone effectively connected to the output of the aforesaid low pass filter.
13. The device of claim 12, wherein the hydrophones of said pair of receiving channels are physically disposed in such diametrically opposed manner as to be responsive to acoustical energy arriving thereat from predominantlY opposite directions.
14. The device of claim 12, wherein the hydrophones of said pair of receiving channels are physically disposed in such manner as to be responsive to acoustical energy arriving thereat from within similar oppositely directed cardioid response patterns.
15. An underwater communication system, comprising in combination: a microphone; a first low pass filter connected to the output of said microphone; a first preamplifier connected to the output of said low pass filter; a balanced modulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof connected to the output of said first preamplifier; a gate having a data signal input, a control input, and an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said balanced modulator; a voice operated switch connected between the output of the aforesaid first preamplifier and the control input of said gate; a first band pass filter connected to the output of said gate a first power amplifier connected to the output of said first band pass filter; a transmitting transducer connected to the output of said first power amplifier; a first hydrophone; a second preamplifier connected to the output of said hydrophone; a second band pass filter connected to the output of said second preamplifier; a first voltage controlled amplifier having a data signal input, a control input, and an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said second band pass filter; a first balanced demodulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof connected to the output of said first voltage controlled amplifier; a second low pass filter connected to the output of said first balanced demodulator; a second power amplifier connected to the output of said second low pass filter; a first earphone connected to the output of said second power amplifier; a second hydrophone; a third preamplifier connected to the output of said second hydrophone; a third band pass filter connected to the output of said third preamplifier; a second voltage controlled amplifier having a data signal input, a control input, and an output, with the data signal input thereof connected to the output of said third band pass filter; a second balanced demodulator having a pair of inputs and an output, with one of the inputs thereof connected to the output of said second voltage controlled amplifier; a third low pass filter connected to the output of said second balanced demodulator; a third power amplifier connected to the output of said third low pass filter; a second earphone connected to the output of said third power amplifier; an oscillator connected to the other inputs of said first and second balanced demodulators and the aforesaid balanced modulator; a summing amplifier having a pair of inputs and an output, with the inputs thereof respectively connected to the outputs of said first and second voltage controlled amplifiers; and a direct current voltage peak detector having an input and an output, with the input thereof connected to the output of said summing amplifier, and with the output thereof connected to the control inputs of the aforesaid first and second voltage controlled amplifiers.
16. The invention of claim 15, further characterized by means for housing said underwater communication system in a waterproof manner and in contiguous disposition with the mouth and ears of an underwater swimmer-diver.
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US3887896A (en) * 1974-04-18 1975-06-03 Us Navy Active sonar image perception
US4041441A (en) * 1976-08-13 1977-08-09 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Diver's pulse stretch sonar
EP0008120A1 (en) * 1978-08-14 1980-02-20 Leslie Kay Method of and apparatus for providing information as to the existence and/or position of objects
US4336537A (en) * 1980-12-17 1982-06-22 Strickland Fredrick G Bi-directional underwater communication system
US4418404A (en) * 1981-10-01 1983-11-29 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Single-sideband acoustic telemetry
US5136555A (en) * 1991-07-05 1992-08-04 Divecomm, Inc. Integrated diver face mask and ultrasound underwater voice communication apparatus
US5303206A (en) * 1992-07-17 1994-04-12 Richard Bemb Method and apparatus for measuring distance and determining direction in a fluid medium
US5555533A (en) * 1994-12-09 1996-09-10 Peck/Pelissier A California Partnership Control system for diver VOX/PTT communication system
US5570688A (en) * 1993-11-17 1996-11-05 Cochran Consulting, Inc. Advanced dive computer for use with a self-contained underwater breathing apparatus
US5579284A (en) * 1995-07-21 1996-11-26 May; David F. Scuba diving voice and communication system using bone conducted sound
US5627802A (en) * 1995-06-19 1997-05-06 Langer Electronics Corp. Sound amplification system having a submersible microphone
USD386499S (en) * 1995-09-26 1997-11-18 Langer Electronics Corp. Hydrophone housing
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US6318363B1 (en) * 1998-01-14 2001-11-20 John M. Monnich Hydrodynamic and ergonomic snorkel
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US20040174771A1 (en) * 2002-03-08 2004-09-09 Pierre Alinat Panoramic audio device for passive sonar
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US20080144434A1 (en) * 2006-12-18 2008-06-19 Stian Hegna Seismic streamers which attentuate longitudinally traveling waves
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Cited By (35)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3887896A (en) * 1974-04-18 1975-06-03 Us Navy Active sonar image perception
US4041441A (en) * 1976-08-13 1977-08-09 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Diver's pulse stretch sonar
EP0008120A1 (en) * 1978-08-14 1980-02-20 Leslie Kay Method of and apparatus for providing information as to the existence and/or position of objects
US4292678A (en) * 1978-08-14 1981-09-29 Leslie Kay Method of and apparatus for echo location of objects
US4336537A (en) * 1980-12-17 1982-06-22 Strickland Fredrick G Bi-directional underwater communication system
US4418404A (en) * 1981-10-01 1983-11-29 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Single-sideband acoustic telemetry
US5136555A (en) * 1991-07-05 1992-08-04 Divecomm, Inc. Integrated diver face mask and ultrasound underwater voice communication apparatus
US5303206A (en) * 1992-07-17 1994-04-12 Richard Bemb Method and apparatus for measuring distance and determining direction in a fluid medium
US5570688A (en) * 1993-11-17 1996-11-05 Cochran Consulting, Inc. Advanced dive computer for use with a self-contained underwater breathing apparatus
US5555533A (en) * 1994-12-09 1996-09-10 Peck/Pelissier A California Partnership Control system for diver VOX/PTT communication system
US5627802A (en) * 1995-06-19 1997-05-06 Langer Electronics Corp. Sound amplification system having a submersible microphone
US5579284A (en) * 1995-07-21 1996-11-26 May; David F. Scuba diving voice and communication system using bone conducted sound
US5706251A (en) * 1995-07-21 1998-01-06 Trigger Scuba, Inc. Scuba diving voice and communication system using bone conducted sound
USD386499S (en) * 1995-09-26 1997-11-18 Langer Electronics Corp. Hydrophone housing
US6318363B1 (en) * 1998-01-14 2001-11-20 John M. Monnich Hydrodynamic and ergonomic snorkel
US6668822B2 (en) 1998-01-14 2003-12-30 John M. Monnich Snorkel with improved purging system
US7032591B2 (en) 1998-01-14 2006-04-25 Monnich John M Snorkel with improved purging system
US20040211413A1 (en) * 1998-01-14 2004-10-28 Monnich John M. Snorkel with improved purging system
US20040174771A1 (en) * 2002-03-08 2004-09-09 Pierre Alinat Panoramic audio device for passive sonar
US6885612B2 (en) * 2002-03-08 2005-04-26 Thales Panoramic audio device for passive sonar
US20060194537A1 (en) * 2005-02-28 2006-08-31 Mccoy Kim System and method for underwater data communication
US7881159B2 (en) * 2006-12-18 2011-02-01 Pgs Geophysical As Seismic streamers which attentuate longitudinally traveling waves
US20080144434A1 (en) * 2006-12-18 2008-06-19 Stian Hegna Seismic streamers which attentuate longitudinally traveling waves
US9950201B2 (en) * 2007-01-04 2018-04-24 Zodiac Aerotechnics Acoustic sensor for use in breathing masks
US20100108065A1 (en) * 2007-01-04 2010-05-06 Paul Zimmerman Acoustic sensor for use in breathing masks
US20160025457A1 (en) * 2009-02-02 2016-01-28 Aerovironment, Inc. Multimode unmanned aerial vehicle
US10222177B2 (en) * 2009-02-02 2019-03-05 Aerovironment, Inc. Multimode unmanned aerial vehicle
US10494093B1 (en) * 2009-02-02 2019-12-03 Aerovironment, Inc. Multimode unmanned aerial vehicle
US11555672B2 (en) 2009-02-02 2023-01-17 Aerovironment, Inc. Multimode unmanned aerial vehicle
US10703506B2 (en) 2009-09-09 2020-07-07 Aerovironment, Inc. Systems and devices for remotely operated unmanned aerial vehicle report-suppressing launcher with portable RF transparent launch tube
US11319087B2 (en) 2009-09-09 2022-05-03 Aerovironment, Inc. Systems and devices for remotely operated unmanned aerial vehicle report-suppressing launcher with portable RF transparent launch tube
US11731784B2 (en) 2009-09-09 2023-08-22 Aerovironment, Inc. Systems and devices for remotely operated unmanned aerial vehicle report-suppressing launcher with portable RF transparent launch tube
US20150219755A1 (en) * 2014-02-03 2015-08-06 Google Inc. Mapping positions of devices using audio
US9753129B2 (en) * 2014-02-03 2017-09-05 Google Inc. Mapping positions of devices using audio
US10145947B2 (en) 2014-02-03 2018-12-04 Google Llc Mapping positions of devices using audio

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