DocumentCode
742886
Title
Modal Mapping Experiment and Geoacoustic Inversion Using Sonobuoys
Author
Frisk, George V. ; Becker, Kyle M. ; Rajan, Subramaniam D. ; Sellers, Cynthia J. ; von der Heydt, Keith ; Smith, Chad M. ; Ballard, Megan S.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Ocean & Mech. Eng., Florida Atlantic Univ., Dania Beach, FL, USA
Volume
40
Issue
3
fYear
2015
fDate
7/1/2015 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
607
Lastpage
620
Abstract
This paper summarizes the results of an experiment whose primary goal was to demonstrate that reliable geoacoustic inversion results can be obtained in shallow water by postprocessing acoustic data acquired by Global Positioning System (GPS)-capable sonobuoys. The experiment was conducted aboard the R/V Sharp on March 5-18, 2011 off the coast of New Jersey using AN/SSQ-53F sonobuoys with a GPS capability as well as GPS-equipped research buoys originally developed under the Modal Mapping Experiment (MOMAX) project, which provided reliable geoacoustic information to which the sonobuoy results could be compared. It is shown that when low-frequency ( 500 Hz) continuous-wave (CW) signals are acquired on the two types of buoys in a colocated configuration, the geoacoustic models inferred from the sonobuoy data are very similar to those obtained from the MOMAX buoy data. The inversion results also compare favorably with bottom models for the region obtained from other experiments. This work is an important milestone toward achieving the ultimate goal of transitioning a basic research method to an operational scenario in which sonobuoy data are routinely used to infer geoacoustic parameters of the seabed.
Keywords
Global Positioning System; buoyancy; geophysical signal processing; modal analysis; oceanographic techniques; signal detection; AN-SSQ-53F sonobuoys; CW signal acquisition; GPS; Global Positioning System; MOMAX project; New Jersey; R-V sharp; continuous-wave signal acquisition; geoacoustic inversion; modal mapping experiment project; postprocessing acoustic data acquisition; shallow water; Acoustics; Apertures; Geoacoustic inversion; Global Positioning System; Marine vehicles; Receivers; Sonar equipment; Geoacoustic inversion; normal modes; shallow-water acoustics; sonobuoys;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Oceanic Engineering, IEEE Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0364-9059
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JOE.2014.2362838
Filename
6975244
Link To Document