DocumentCode :
1048506
Title :
Simulations of Matched-Field Processing in a Deep-Water Pacific Environment
Author :
Porter, Michael B. ; Dicus, Ronald L. ; Fizell, Richard G.
Author_Institution :
Applied Ocean Research Branch, Naval Research Lab., Washington, DC, USA
Volume :
12
Issue :
1
fYear :
1987
fDate :
1/1/1987 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
173
Lastpage :
181
Abstract :
Conventional bearing estimation procedures employ planewave steering vectors as replicas of the true field and seek to resolve in angle by maximizing a power function representing the agreement between actual and replica fields. For vertical arrays in oceanic waveguides the received field depends on range and depth, and it is natural to replace the "look-direction" ( \\theta ) by a "look-position" ( r, z ). Thus an environmental model is constructed by specifying ocean depth, sound speed profile, bottom properties, etc., and a propagation model is employed to construct a replica of the field that would be received on the array for a particular source position. The usual estimators (e.g., Bartlett or maximum likelihood) are then used to gauge the agreement between actual and replica fields and the true source position is identified as that position where the agreement is best. The performance of this kind of matched-field processing is strongly affected by the environment. In particular, we demonstrate through simulations that for a deep-water Pacific environment dominated by waterborne paths, ambiguities or sidelobes are associated with convergence zones. In the absence of mismatch between replica and actual fields we find that a 16-element array performs extremely well in low-frequency regimes. Mismatch caused by uncertainties in phone positions, bottom parameters, ocean sound speed, surface and bottom roughness, etc., causes degradation in localization performance. The impact of some of these effects on conventional and maximum likelihood estimators is examined through simulation.
Keywords :
Sonar detection; Sonar propagation; Sonar signal processing; Acoustic propagation; Acoustic waveguides; Convergence; Direction of arrival estimation; Maximum likelihood estimation; Oceans; Rough surfaces; Sea surface; Surface roughness; Uncertainty;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Oceanic Engineering, IEEE Journal of
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0364-9059
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JOE.1987.1145227
Filename :
1145227
Link To Document :
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