Space-frequency Correlations in Multistatic Acoustic Reverberation Due to a Wind-driven Sea Surface


Book Description

Analytic methods are used to assess the impact of the two-dimensional (2-D) wave spectrum of a wind-driven sea on multistatic low-frequency surface reverberation. The problem is initially posed with a narrowband source beneath a time-dependent sea surface in an ocean that can have depth dependence and bottom layering. The propagated signal interacts with the slower moving surface waves to produce a narrowband scattered field. The small-waveheight approximation is applied to a deterministic sea surface to express the scattered field in terms of the surface elevation and the Green's function for a perfectly calm sea. Randomness is then incorporated into the surface description, and its impact is formulated for an arbitrarily placed pair of receivers. The three-dimensional (3-D) cross-spectral density (CSD) of the reverberation is reduced to a sum of baseband and sideband terms formulated as multiple mean-sea-surface integrals. The sideband result is identified as an active scattering generalization of the van Cittert-Zernike theorem from partial coherence theory. The focus is then narrowed to shallow deployment in a homogeneous ocean, and stationary-phase estimates are used to produce analytic expressions for the CSD. The zero-Doppler component and Bragg-Doppler sidebands are expressed in terms of the power spectrum of the source, the power spectrum and directionality of the surface waves, and the multistatic source/receiver geometry. Sample sideband calculations are provided to illustrate the results, and system implications are considered.




Ocean Reverberation


Book Description

This volume comprises over 50 contributions resulting from the Ocean Reverberation Symposium, held 25-29 May 1992 in La Spezia, Italy. The contributions are presented in eight sections: Scattering Mechanisms, High Frequency Measurements and Mechanisms, Reverberation Modelling, ARSRP Mid-Atlantic Ridge Experiment, Low Frequency Measurements, Volume Scattering, Signal Processing Issues and Applications.




Acoustic Reverberation at the Sea Surface: Surface and Sublayer Spectra Vis-a-Vis Scattering and Reflection


Book Description

The paper combines previously developed theories of surface and volume scattering and reflection with published and previously unpublished acoustic reverberation data to develop a composite theory for reverberation strength as a function of acoustic frequency, incidence or grazing angle, and sea-surface wind speed. In passing, spectra of sea-surface roughness and of the surface sublayer turbulence are developed, these spectra being consonant with theoretical and experimental estimates. (Author).







Doppler Spectra of Sea-Surface Backscatter at High Acoustic Frequencies


Book Description

The initial transfer of energy from atmospheric wind to the ocean surface, which would be a significant factor in ambient noise, may occur via the so-called Cat's Paw phenomena. To study this effect, an experiment was conducted at Seneca Lake for a moderately disturbed (no whitecaps) air-water interface. Doppler spectrum measurements of high-frequency acoustic waves backscattered from the wind-driven water surface indicate the presence of small-scale roughness that is convected downward by surface drift. For a slightly rippled surface, there is a sharp resonant peak corresponding to a convection velocity of approximately 0.4 m/s which is nearly independent of wind speed. The spectrum is broadened by phase modulation due to the orbital motion of large-scale gravity waves but remains skewed in the downwind direction. (Author).







Frequency Spreading in Underwater Acoustic Signal Transmission


Book Description

The scattering of acoustic waves from a randomly varying wind-driven water surface is known to introduce both time and frequency spreading of the received signal. The frequency spreading is thought to be related to surface statistics and water wave motion. Therefore, knowledge of this relation leads to the possibility of predicting surface statistics by analysis of the received acoustic signal. One important feature of the frequency spreading function is that the Doppler sidebands are not equal in magnitude on both sides of the carrier. Unequal sidebands are predicted if the acoustic source and receiver are not located at the same depths below the water surface and if the direction of the surface wave motion is not perpendicular to the vertical plane containing both the source and the receiver. Experimental results from a model tank operated under various wind conditions have verified the existence of unequal Doppler sidebands under these conditions. However, strong asymmetries in sidebands were also observed under conditions under which the previous theory would have predicted no asymmetries at all. For example, strong asymmetries have been observed in the crosswind direction. This research is to explain the asymmetries not predicted in previous theory but discovered under laboratory operations, and to predict other asymmetries not yet found in either the experimental or the theoretical phase.




Specular Scatter of Underwater Sound From a Wind-Driven Model Sea Surface


Book Description

Underwater sound was scattered from a wind-agitated random rough model sea surface. The surface energy spectral density, the surface rms height, and the surface correlation function were measured. The mean square magnitude and probability distribution of the specularly scattered sound were measured for various angles of incidence between 35 degrees and grazing. The results are compared with the basic theories expressed by Eckart and Beckmann and shadowing corrections derived by Wagner. The frequency spectrum of the scattered sound was studied and found to contain doppler shifted components, contrary to theory which predicts no doppler shifting in the purely specular direction. A detailed analysis of the origin of this doppler shifting is presented, and it is shown that interaction between axial and off-axis radiation is the explanation of the observed frequency broadening. (Author).




Springer Handbook of Acoustics


Book Description

This is an unparalleled modern handbook reflecting the richly interdisciplinary nature of acoustics edited by an acknowledged master in the field. The handbook reviews the most important areas of the subject, with emphasis on current research. The authors of the various chapters are all experts in their fields. Each chapter is richly illustrated with figures and tables. The latest research and applications are incorporated throughout, including computer recognition and synthesis of speech, physiological acoustics, diagnostic imaging and therapeutic applications and acoustical oceanography. An accompanying CD-ROM contains audio and video files.




Applied Underwater Acoustics


Book Description

Applied Underwater Acoustics meets the needs of scientists and engineers working in underwater acoustics and graduate students solving problems in, and preparing theses on, topics in underwater acoustics. The book is structured to provide the basis for rapidly assimilating the essential underwater acoustic knowledge base for practical application to daily research and analysis. Each chapter of the book is self-supporting and focuses on a single topic and its relation to underwater acoustics. The chapters start with a brief description of the topic’s physical background, necessary definitions, and a short description of the applications, along with a roadmap to the chapter. The subtopics covered within individual subchapters include most frequently used equations that describe the topic. Equations are not derived, rather, assumptions behind equations and limitations on the applications of each equation are emphasized. Figures, tables, and illustrations related to the sub-topic are presented in an easy-to-use manner, and examples on the use of the equations, including appropriate figures and tables are also included. Provides a complete and up-to-date treatment of all major subjects of underwater acoustics Presents chapters written by recognized experts in their individual field Covers the fundamental knowledge scientists and engineers need to solve problems in underwater acoustics Illuminates, in shorter sub-chapters, the modern applications of underwater acoustics that are described in worked examples Demands no prior knowledge of underwater acoustics, and the physical principles and mathematics are designed to be readily understood by scientists, engineers, and graduate students of underwater acoustics Includes a comprehensive list of literature references for each chapter