(with MAD located in aft-facing fin-top fairing) escorted by US Navy
Lockheed P-3C (MAD located in projection at base of tail), March 1986 The
magnetic anomaly from a submarine is usually very small. One source estimates that it is only about 0.2 n
T at a distance of 600 m. Another source estimates that a 100m long and 10m wide submarine would produce a magnetic flux of 13.33nT at 500m, 1.65nT at 1km and 0.01nT at 5km. To reduce interference from electrical equipment or metal in the
fuselage of the aircraft, the MAD sensor is placed at the end of a boom or on a towed aerodynamic device. Even so, the submarine must be very near the aircraft's position and close to the sea surface for detection of the anomaly, because magnetic fields decrease as the
inverse cube of distance, one source gives a detection
slant range of 500m. If the sea floor has sunken ships, then submarines may operate near them to confuse magnetic anomaly detectors. MAD has certain advantages over other detection methods. It is a passive detection method. Unlike sonar it is not affected by meteorological conditions; indeed above
sea state 5, MAD may be the only reliable method for submarine detection. In many target-based schemes, the measured anomaly is expanded in orthogonal basis functions (OBFs) that work by using the dipole model. OBF decomposition works by expanding the measured field into an orthogonal basis derived from dipole theory in which a detection statistic is constructed from the energy of the expansion coefficient, enhancing the signal-to-noise ratio for weak magnetic anomalies. ==Other uses==