Title :
Measurement of Low-Frequency Sound Attenuation in Marine Sediment
Author :
Jiang, Yong-Min ; Chapman, N. Ross
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Earth & Ocean Sci., Univ. of Victoria, Victoria, BC, Canada
Abstract :
Marine sediment compressional wave attenuation and its frequency dependence have been active topics in the ocean acoustics community. To support the predictions of the frequency dependence of the sediment attenuation, experimental studies are essential for providing the observations of the sediment attenuation as a function of frequency in different environments, such as sediment type, source-receiver range, water depth, etc. This paper proposes an experimental method for estimating marine sediment attenuation at low frequencies in shallow water. The experimental geometry is short range between a vertical line array and multiple source depths to cover bottom reflections over a wide span of grazing angles. Single bounce bottom-reflected (BR) and sub-bottom-reflected signals are used in the analysis to obtain the best approximation of the sediment intrinsic attenuation. The attenuation estimating method is demonstrated on chirp data (1.5-4.5 kHz) collected on the New Jersey Continental Shelf during the 2006 Shallow Water Experiment (SW06). The data indicate a linear frequency dependence of the compressional wave attenuation for clay rich sediments on the outer shelf, and the estimated value is 0.15 dB/?? within the frequency band of 1.75-3.15 kHz. The observation of small sound-speed dispersion of ~ 15 m/s over the frequency band is consistent with a linear frequency dependence of attenuation.
Keywords :
acoustic wave scattering; oceanographic techniques; sediments; underwater acoustic propagation; 2006 Shallow Water Experiment; AD 2006 08 31; New Jersey Continental Shelf; SW06; bottom reflections; chirp data; clay rich sediments; frequency 1.5 kHz to 4.5 kHz; grazing angles; low-frequency sound attenuation measurement; marine sediment compressional wave attenuation; ocean acoustics; sediment attenuation; shallow water; single bounce bottom-reflected signals; sound-speed dispersion; source-receiver range; sub-bottom-reflected signals; Compressional wave attenuation; frequency dependence of attenuation; sediment attenuation; sediment property measurement; sound-speed dispersion;
Journal_Title :
Oceanic Engineering, IEEE Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JOE.2009.2038252