“…This subdivision leads to entirely different loudspeaker designs for the low, mid and high frequencies (see Figure 4). The audio-seismic comparison highlights the fundamental difference of the DSA concept with systems such as Polychromatic Acquisition (CREWES consortium) and SeisMovie (Meunier et al, 2001), where broadband source units operate in a multi-monochromatic manner. Inhomogeneous blending with DSAs has a number of attractive potential advantages: (1) the dedicated narrowband units of a blended array represent technically simple, no-compromise source units, (2) destructive interference within a source array is avoided, allowing angle-independent source wavelets, (3) each source type has its own spatial sampling interval, allowing multi-scale acquisition grids, (4) each source type has its own depth level, allowing ghost matching in the field (marine), (5) deblending DSA data is relatively simple: the first step (source decoding + bandpass filtering) is already very effective, (6) DSAs are more flexible to comply with the emerging strict regulation on sea life protection (marine).…”