Title :
Effects of internal waves on sound pulse propagation in the Straits of Florida
Author :
Tang, Xin ; Tappert, Frederick D.
Author_Institution :
Rosenstiel Sch. of Marine & Atmos. Sci., Miami Univ., FL, USA
fDate :
4/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
An unexplained result of broad-band transmission experiments made more than ten years ago by DeFerrari in the Straits of Florida (center frequency ~500 Hz, bandwidth ~100 Hz, water depth ~200-m, range ~20 km) is that the measured pulse response functions failed to show the expected multipath replicas of the transmitted pulse and instead were smeared into a single broad cluster (duration ~50-~350 ms) in which the unresolved multipaths fluctuated rapidly in geophysical time (coherence time ≪12 min) leaving only a relatively stable envelope that is useful for oceanographic inversion. It is demonstrated here that the effects of internal waves on sound pulse propagation in the Straits of Florida can explain these observed results, and it is suggested that similar instabilities of acoustic multipaths due to internal waves are to be expected in other shallow-water propagation conditions. The demonstration is based on numerical simulations with the broad-band UMPE acoustic model that includes multiple forward scattering from volume inhomogeneities induced by internal wave fluctuations that are described by a broad spectrum of excitation. The simulated temporal variability, stability, and coherence of acoustic pulse arrivals are displayed on geophysical time scales from seconds to many hours and are qualitatively in agreement with the measured data in the Straits of Florida
Keywords :
acoustic pulses; acoustic signal processing; acoustic wave scattering; geophysical signal processing; inverse problems; ocean waves; oceanographic regions; oceanographic techniques; seafloor phenomena; underwater sound; 100 Hz; 20 km; 200 m; 50 to 350 ms; 500 Hz; Straits of Florida; acoustic pulse arrivals; bottom roughness scattering; broadband UMPE acoustic model; broadband transmission experiments; gophysical time scales; internal wave effects; multipath replicas; multiple forward scattering; oceanographic inversion; pulse response functions; relatively stable envelope; rough seafloor; semi-infinite sediment layer; shallow-water propagation conditions; single broad cluster; sound pulse propagation; temporal variability; volume inhomogeneities; Acoustic propagation; Acoustic pulses; Acoustic waves; Bandwidth; Coherence; Frequency; Geophysical measurements; Pulse measurements; Sea measurements; Time measurement;
Journal_Title :
Oceanic Engineering, IEEE Journal of