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2:33 PM
@AnderBiguri Have you ever done ultrasound reconstruction stuff?
 
it's neat how you can do tomography with ultrasound too
 
 
3 hours later…
5:58 PM
@AnderBiguri comon, who else do you think is going to explain it to me? D:
in all seriousness, I thougt it would be cool to make an ultrasound thingie but with speakers and microphones, but most resources I find just explain it very superficially
 
speakers don't usually do ultrasound frequencies
 
6:19 PM
ultrasound speakers then:P
I mean these little things that are also ubiquitouly used in ultrasonic distance sensors for arduino/raspberry pi and the link
^ this one has two of these
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні also, are you a bat?
 
Are those piezoelectric?
 
yes, apparently!
no magnets, sorry
(the thing I forgot to mention, whatever I search for, I only find literature on 3d and more advanced reconstruction stuff, but not the most basic 2d application)
 
 
3 hours later…
9:57 PM
@flawr In Delft back in the day there was a group doing this type of imaging underground, using long arrays of microphones and "controlled explosions".
 
Seismographic tomography?
 
I'm not sure how you get the directionality for a 2D section. But other than that, it's about detecting pulses, matching them across sensors, then determining the location of the reflecting surface by triangulation.
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні Is that what it's called? Sounds about right...
 
Seismic tomography is a technique for imaging the subsurface of the Earth with seismic waves produced by earthquakes or explosions. P-, S-, and surface waves can be used for tomographic models of different resolutions based on seismic wavelength, wave source distance, and the seismograph array coverage. The data received at seismometers are used to solve an inverse problem, wherein the locations of reflection and refraction of the wave paths are determined. This solution can be used to create 3D images of velocity anomalies which may be interpreted as structural, thermal, or compositional variations...
You were so close!
 
neat
it also makes sense, because the -graphic refers to the device that draws lines
 
10:01 PM
Oh, they take refraction into account as well. That should make it a bit harder...
 
"What is the inside of the Earth like?" "I don't know, let's blow it up and see!"
 
"-graphic -graphy" does sound a bit redundant.
 

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