Abstract
Specific characteristics of offshore sound propagation are investigated in numerical simulations for soft bottom at a small range r 3H to 50H from the source, where H is the water depth. The bottom is assumed to be a liquid homogeneous medium with sound speed c1 lower (soft bottom) than sound speed ? in the water layer. It is demonstrated that the bottom sound speed can vary within wide limits for a gassaturated bottom. It is shown that for a soft bottom, the sound attenuation coefficient β monotonically increases in the water layer with increasing sound speed in the bottom. The β maximum depends on the sound frequency and is obtained when c1 approaches ≈ c. This maximum can reach 10 dB/km for summer conditions when the vertical sound speed profile has a negative gradient in the water layer. A special procedure is proposed to estimate the averaged effective sound speed and gas concentration in the sea bottom. The procedure can be used for estimating oil-And-gas saturation and methane emission on the Arctic shelf.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Petnikov, V. G., Chernousov, A. D., Lunkov, A. A., & Grigoriev, V. A. (2015). Sound propagation in the shelf area with soft bottom. In Proceedings of Meetings on Acoustics (Vol. 24). Acoustical Society of America. https://doi.org/10.1121/2.0000111
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