Windows 95 based Pentium
machine Saves sidescan-sonar
data via network interface or on an Exabyte 8200 tape subsystem Will accept up to 5 channels
of data Serial I/O ports (i.e.,
for navigation) Parallel (Centronics)
ports for printing the sidescan-sonar data Array processor handling
the digitized sidescan-sonar signal 12 bit analog to digital
converter OR: DSP card for digital signals
The topside data acquisition computer the USGS uses to collect and store the digital
signal is the ISIS™ system, which runs under the Windows 95 operating system and
is built by Triton Elics International, Inc.,
Watsonville, CA using a 12-bit (72 db effective dynamic range) A/D converter in
conjunction with an array processor. ISIS™ is capable of digitizing up to four
channels of information at aggregate rates of up to 750 kHz, thus preserving the
content and the dynamic range of the sidescan-sonar signal. An installed Digital
Signal Processing (DSP) board is an alternative to handling signals digitized
at the towfish (SIS-1000). Port and starboard sidescan-sonar data are displayed
in real-time on a high-resolution color display (1280 x 1024 pixels). Telemetry
from navigation systems and the towfish, including full towfish attitude information,
is displayed in separate windows. The backup data storage media used is 8 mm Exabyte
tape. The USGS Woods Hole Field Center is currently recording directly to
disk on separate computer systems using the Network File System (NFS) protocol
and archiving the data to CD-ROM.