Daniel Mata Flores

and 4 more

Underwater fiber optic cables commonly traverse a variety of seafloor conditions, which leads to an uneven mechanical coupling between the cable and the ocean bottom. On rough seafloor bathymetry, some cable portions might be suspended and thus susceptible to Vortex-Induced Vibrations (VIV) driven by deep ocean currents. Here, we examine the potential of Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) to monitor deep-sea currents along suspended sections of underwater telecom fiber optic cables undergoing VIV. Oscillations of a seafloor fiber optic cable located in southern France are recorded by DAS along cable sections presumably hanging. Their characteristic frequencies are lower than 1 Hz, at different ocean depths, and have an amplitude-dependency consistent with the driving mechanism being VIV. Based on a theoretical proportionality between current speed and VIV frequencies, we derive ocean current speed time series at 2390 m depth from the vortex shedding frequencies recorded by DAS. The DAS-derived current speed time series is in agreement with recordings by a current meter located 3.75 km away from the hanging cable section (similar dominant period, high correlation after time shift). The DAS-derived current speed time series displays features, such as characteristic periods and spectral decay, associated with the generation of internal gravity waves and weak oceanic turbulence in the Mediterranean Sea. The results demonstrate the potential of DAS along hanging segments of fiber optic cables to monitor a wide range of oceanography processes, at depths barely studied with current instrumentation.

Daniel Mata Flores

and 4 more

Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) enables data acquisition for underwater Earth Science with unprecedented spatial resolution. Submarine fibre optic cables traverse sea bottom features that can lead to suspended or decoupled cable portions, and are exposed to the ocean dynamics and to high rates of marine erosion or sediment deposition, which may induce temporal variations of the cable’s mechanical coupling to the ocean floor. Although these spatio-temporal fluctuations of the mechanical coupling affect the quality of the data recorded by DAS, and determine whether a cable section is useful or not for geophysical purposes, the detection of unsuitable cable portions has not been investigated in detail. Here, we report on DAS observations of two distinct vibration regimes of seafloor fibre optic cables: a high-frequency (> 2 Hz) regime we associate to cable segments pinned between seafloor features, and a low-frequency (< 1 Hz) regime we associate to suspended cable sections. While the low-frequency oscillations are driven by deep ocean currents, the high-frequency oscillations are triggered by the passage of earthquake seismic waves. Using Proper Orthogonal Decomposition, we demonstrate that high-frequency oscillations excite normal modes comparable to those of a finite 1D wave propagation structure. We further identify trapped waves propagating along cable portions featuring high-frequency oscillations. Their wave speed is consistent with that of longitudinal waves propagating across the steel armouring of the cable. The DAS data on cable sections featuring such cable waves are dominated by highly monochromatic noise. Our results suggest that the spatio-temporal evolution of the mechanical coupling between fibre optic cables exposed to the ocean dynamics and the seafloor can be monitored through the combined analysis of the two vibration regimes presented here, which provides a DAS-based method to identify underwater cable sections unsuitable for the analysis of seismic waves.