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America 137, 3009-3023. BioSketches
Timothy F. Duda received his PhD in oceanography from the Scripps Insti- tution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego (La Jolla) in 1986. He worked at the University of California, Santa Cruz (Santa Cruz), from 1986 to
1991 and has been a scientist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (Woods Hole, MA) since 1991. His three primary fields of study are ocean acous- tic propagation, ocean internal gravity waves, and ocean mixing processes. His research into these has included
theoretical and observational physical process studies, development of new measurement tools, and computational acoustic modeling.
Julien Bonnel received his PhD in signal processing from the Grenoble Institut National Polytechnique (Grenoble INP; Grenoble, France) in 2010. From 2010 to 2017, he was an assistant/associate professor at the Laboratoire des Sciences et Technologies de l’Information, de la
Communication et de la Connaissance (Lab-STICC), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) UMR 6285,
École Nationale Supérieure de Techniques Avancées de Bretagne (ENSTA Bretagne; Brest, France). Since September 2017, he has been an associate scientist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (Woods Hole, MA). His research in signal processing and underwater acoustics includes time- frequency analysis, source detection/localization, geoacoustic inversion, acoustical tomography, passive acoustic monitor- ing, and bioacoustics.
Emanuel Coelho is a senior scientist at Applied Ocean Sciences LLC. He received his PhD in oceanography from the Naval Postgraduate School (Monterey, CA). He was a senior scien- tist at the NATO Center for Maritime Research and Experimentation (La
Spezia, Italy), research professor at the University of New Orleans (New Orleans, LA) working as a contractor for the Naval Research Laboratory at the Stennis Space Center (MS), and Oceanography Department head at the Hydrographic Institute (Portugal). His research focuses on ocean-acoustics environmental characterization and operational risk analy- sis using advanced robotic observing systems, stochastic prediction models, and filtering theory.
Kevin D. Heaney received his PhD degree in applied ocean sciences from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego (La Jolla) in 1997. Dr. Heaney has exten- sive experience in ocean acoustic propagation and modeling, optimal
oceanographic sampling and data assimilation, geoacous- tic inversion, adaptive sonar signal processing, and data analysis. He has worked on a variety programs, including long-range ocean acoustic tomography, geoacoustic inversion and rapid environmental characterization, and the effects of internal waves on signal coherence. Dr. Heaney has successfully transitioned algorithms to the Naval Oceanographic Office (NAVOCEANO; Stennis Space Center), Naval Sea Systems Command (NAVSEA; Washington, DC), and Commander, Naval Meteorology and Oceanography Command (CNMOC; Stennis Space Center). In 2019, he founded Applied Ocean Sciences (Fairfax Station, VA).
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