Deep water towed array measurements at close range

  • Heaney K
  • Campbell R
  • Murray J
  • et al.
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Abstract

During the North Pacific Acoustic Laboratory Philippine Sea 2009 experiment, towed array receptions were made from a towed source as the two ships transited from a separation of several Convergence Zones through a Closest Point of Approach at 3 km. A combination of narrowband tones and broadband pulses were transmitted covering the frequency band 79–535 Hz. The received energy arrives from two general paths—direct path and bottom bounce. Bearing-time records of the narrowband arrivals at times show a 35° spread in the angle of arrival of the bottom bounce energy. Doppler processing of the tones shows significant frequency spread of the bottom bounce energy. Two-dimensional modeling using measured bathymetry, a geoacoustic parameterization based upon the geological record, and measured sound-speed field was performed. Inclusion of the effects of seafloor roughness and surface waves shows that in-plane scattering from rough interfaces can explain much of the observed spread in the arrivals. Evidence of out-of-plane scattering does exist, however, at short ranges. The amount of out-of-plane scattering is best observed in the broadband impulse-beam response analysis, which in-plane surface roughness modeling cannot explain.

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APA

Heaney, K. D., Campbell, R. L., Murray, J. J., Baggeroer, A. B., Scheer, E. K., Stephen, R. A., … Mercer, J. A. (2013). Deep water towed array measurements at close range. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 134(4), 3230–3241. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4818869

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