N181-067
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TITLE: Real-time Compression
for Acoustic Array Time-Domain Data
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TECHNOLOGY AREA(S):
Battlespace, Electronics, Sensors
ACQUISITION PROGRAM: PMS 485,
Maritime Surveillance Systems Program Office
The technology within this
topic is restricted under the International Traffic in Arms Regulation (ITAR),
22 CFR Parts 120-130, which controls the export and import of defense-related
material and services, including export of sensitive technical data, or the
Export Administration Regulation (EAR), 15 CFR Parts 730-774, which controls
dual use items. Offerors must disclose any proposed use of foreign nationals
(FNs), their country(ies) of origin, the type of visa or work permit possessed,
and the statement of work (SOW) tasks intended for accomplishment by the FN(s)
in accordance with section 5.4.c.(8) of the Announcement. Offerors are advised
foreign nationals proposed to perform on this topic may be restricted due to
the technical data under US Export Control Laws.
OBJECTIVE: Create innovative
algorithms and software for commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) general-purpose
computers and Digital Signal Processing (DSP) equipment capable of converting
time-domain data from a passive acoustic array into a compressed data stream
that can be transmitted via satellite communications (SATCOM) and rebuilt into
a replica of the original data.
DESCRIPTION: The Navy is
seeking solutions to enable data from acoustic arrays to be transmitted in
real-time without degradation to shore facilities for processing by
specialists.� Such transmission solutions would reduce the need for
installation of expensive data processing and display systems on ships and the
requisite specially trained crewmembers on-board to perform real-time data
analysis.� Since the capability sought is expected to be fielded as software
that can be integrated into the shipboard array processor system, the recurring
cost to field the capability would be minimal.
Current surface Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW) practice for Surveillance Towed
Array Sensor System (SURTASS) ships requires installation of an expensive,
custom-built data processing system on each ASW ship, because the data from the
arrays is too large to be transmitted to shore in real-time via Navy satellite
communications (SATCOM). The quantity of data expected to be created by
next-generation arrays is even greater and available satellite data bandwidth
is not expected to grow from its present size.� Therefore, current and future
ASW platforms need a lossless data compression capability that enables raw
time-domain data from each element of the array (up to 256 channels
simultaneously) to be transmitted to shore and reconstructed as an exact
replica to enable accurate data processing and precise target localization.
A unique solution to acoustic data compression is required for this
application.� Unlike consumer audio applications in which psychoacoustic
phenomena are leveraged and much of the inaudible data is selectively removed,
the compression scheme must preserve the time-domain waveform precisely in both
amplitude and time across all sensor channels in order for the array
beamforming performance to be fully exploited by the DSP system.� Additionally,
unlike commercial audio applications, all sensor channels are receiving data
from a common real-world physical source (e.g., there is not a guitar on one
channel and a vocal on another); therefore, each channel is processing the same
acoustic data, but with variations in amplitude and time among the channels.�
It may be assumed that the configuration of the sensors, including their
spacing and bandwidth, is provided to the compression and decompression
algorithm.� Sampling rates may vary among sensor channels.� It should be noted
that ambient noise needs to be preserved in the compression, and electronically
induced sensor noise can be assumed less than ambient noise (and therefore
inconsequential).
The product for this effort is software source code that can be integrated into
the Navy�s common processor system, which is based upon the Intel x86-64
platform and the Linux operating system.� (Previously other SBIR-sponsored
software projects have been integrated into this common processor system, and
appropriate safeguards to protect the contributors� intellectual property have
been put in place.)� A COTS DSP device may be used if required, but it will
need to be integrated into the processor system.� It is acceptable to leverage
available open-source code.� The objective ratio of compression is 80% compared
to the raw array data stream with an input/output latency of less than one
minute.
In summary, the capability includes the following characteristics that are not
available in today�s lossless compression/de-coding schemes:
1. Input has user-variable number of channels up to 256
2. Output incorporates forward error correction (FEC) with automatic
negotiation capable of supporting radio/satellite data links with a bit error
rate of 0.01, end-to-end latency of two seconds, and data block outages of up
to two seconds
3. Including FEC, output is single data stream composed of 80% of the data
volume compared to raw data
4. Sample rates can be selected by the user in 1Hz intervals up to at least
96kHz
5. Sample rates can vary among channels, but will be in integer multiples of
each other
6. After coding and de-coding, the time domain waveform shall be visually
identical to the original with objective performance of true effective 16-bit
resolution (96dB dynamic range), < 0.05% Total Harmonic Distortion (THD),
frequency response accuracy +/- 0.1dB, and phase accuracy between channels of
+/- 1 degree at 0.9*(Nyquist frequency/2)
7. Coding and de-coding processing latency not to exceed one minute
Work produced in Phase II may become classified. Note: The prospective
contractor(s) must be U.S. Owned and Operated with no Foreign Influence as
defined by DOD 5220.22-M, National Industrial Security Program Operating
Manual, unless acceptable mitigating procedures can and have been implemented
and approved by the Defense Security Service (DSS). The selected contractor
and/or subcontractor must be able to acquire and maintain a secret level
facility and Personnel Security Clearances, in order to perform on advanced
phases of this contract as set forth by DSS and NAVSEA in order to gain access
to classified information pertaining to the national defense of the United
States and its allies; this will be an inherent requirement. The selected
company will be required to safeguard classified material IAW DoD 5220.22-M
during the advance phases of this contract.
PHASE I: Develop a concept
for real-time lossless compression for acoustic array time-domain data
implementation and perform analysis, modeling, and/or a demonstration to
support the technical recommendation.� The Phase I Option, if awarded, will
include the initial design specifications and capabilities description to build
a prototype solution in Phase II. Develop a Phase II plan.
PHASE II: Using the
requirements and concept of Phase I and the Phase II Statement of Work (SOW),
develop and deliver a prototype for a complete implementation of the data
compression and decoding capability.� Demonstrate the prototype�s performance
in a lab using real-life array data that will be supplied by the Navy. (Since
this data is classified, this demonstration can be performed on accredited
classified equipment in the performer�s facility or at a Navy facility.)
Support a temporary installation of the compression capability aboard a Navy
ship to demonstrate the performance of its design in an operational
environment; support the installation of the decoding capability at a Navy
shore site; and provide operational testing technical support and performance
analysis.� In preparation for a potential Phase III, provide an estimate of
schedule, non-recurring cost, and product cost to support integration of the
capability into the Navy processor system.
It is probable that the work under this effort will be classified under Phase
II (see Description section for details).
PHASE III DUAL USE
APPLICATIONS: Support the Navy in transitioning the technology to Navy use. Work
with the Navy�s integrator to support the integration and testing of the
capability into the Navy processing equipment on-board an operational SURTASS
ship.� Tasks may include software development, software quality assurance,
cybersecurity support, development of documentation, and test support on shore
and at-sea.� Deliver future software/hardware builds of the processor system
with the SBIR-developed integrated compression and de-coding capability.
Passive acoustic arrays are used in the oil industry and this data compression
capability would have direct application for data storage or transmission via
radio.� As an example of a business case, this data compression capability
could be used to decrease deployment costs significantly by enabling the use of
a relatively inexpensive unmanned vessel to collect acoustic data rather than a
ship with crew ($50k-100k/day).
REFERENCES:
1. Johnson, M., Partan, J.,
and Hurst, T. �Low Complexity Lossless Compression of Underwater Sound
Recordings.� J. Acoust. Soc. Am., March 2013, Vol 133, No. 3, pp. 1387-1398. https://soundtags.st-andrews.ac.uk/files/2012/05/Johnson_etal_JASA2013.pdf
2. Liebchen, Tilman. �MPEG-4
ALS � The Standard for Lossless Audio Coding.� The Journal of the Acoustic
Society of Korea, October 2009, vol. 28, no. 7. http://elvera.nue.tu-berlin.de/files/1216Liebchen2009.pdf
KEYWORDS: Audio; Lossless
Compression; Acoustic Data Compression; Real-time Data Compression; Lossless
Compression/De-coding Schemes; Data Compression; Communications in a
Battlespace Environment
** TOPIC NOTICE **
These Navy Topics are part of the overall DoD 2018.1 SBIR BAA. The DoD issued its 2018.1 BAA SBIR pre-release on November 29, 2017, which opens to receive proposals on January 8, 2018, and closes February 7, 2018 at 8:00 PM ET.
Between November 29, 2017 and January 7, 2018 you may talk directly with the Topic Authors (TPOC) to ask technical questions about the topics. During these dates, their contact information is listed above. For reasons of competitive fairness, direct communication between proposers and topic authors is not allowed starting January 8, 2018 when DoD begins accepting proposals for this BAA.
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