Title :
Investigation of Mode Filtering as a Preprocessing Method for Shallow-Water Acoustic Communications
Author :
Morozov, Andrey K. ; Preisig, James C. ; Papp, Joseph C.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Appl. Ocean Phys. & Eng., Woods Hole Oceanogr. Instn., Woods Hole, MA, USA
Abstract :
Acoustical array data from the 2006 Shallow Water Experiment (SW06) was analyzed to show the feasibility of broadband mode decomposition as a preprocessing method to reduce the effective channel delay spread and concentrate received signal energy in a small number of independent channels. The data were collected by a vertical array, which spans the water column from 12-m depth to the bottom in shallow water 80 m in depth. Binary-sequence data were used to phase-shift-keyed (PSK) modulate signals with different carrier frequencies. No error correction coding was used. The received signals were processed by a system that does not use training or pilot signals. Signals received both during periods of ordinary internal wave activity and during a period with unusually strong internal wave solitons were processed and analyzed. Different broadband mode-filtering methods were analyzed and tested. Broadband mode filtering decomposed the received signal into a number of independent signals with a reduced delay spread. The analysis of signals from the output of mode filters shows that even a simple demodulator can achieve a low bit error rate (BER) at a distance 19.2 km.
Keywords :
acoustic signal processing; binary sequences; error statistics; filtering theory; phase shift keying; solitons; underwater acoustic communication; BER; binary-sequence data; broadband mode decomposition; broadband mode-filtering methods; demodulator; distance 19.2 km; effective channel delay spread reduction; error correction coding; internal wave solitons; low bit error rate; phase-shift-keying; pilot signals; received signal processing; shallow-water acoustic communications; signal energy; Acoustics; Broadband communication; Delay; Equalizers; Signal processing; Sonar equipment; Underwater acoustics; Signal processing; underwater acoustic arrays; underwater acoustic communications;
Journal_Title :
Oceanic Engineering, IEEE Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JOE.2010.2045444