DocumentCode :
1953712
Title :
Wavefront curvature passive ranging in a temporally varying sound propagation medium
Author :
Ferguson, B.G. ; Wyber, R.J.
Author_Institution :
Maritime Operations Div., DSTO, Pyrmont, NSW, Australia
Volume :
4
fYear :
2001
fDate :
2001
Firstpage :
2359
Abstract :
Passive ranging techniques are used in sonar systems to localize sources that radiate acoustic energy into the underwater environment. Passive ranging by wavefront curvature relies on the spherical expansion of the wavefronts as the acoustic energy propagates outwards from the source. A wide-aperture receiving array is used to sense the curvature of the wavefront by estimating the intersensor time delays as the wavefront traverses the array. The time delay estimates are used to calculate the range (which is equal to the radius of curvature of the wavefront) and hearing of the source. The method assumes that the properties of the sound propagation medium are temporally invariant (or stationary). The wavefront curvature method is applied here to the passive ranging of three different sources of acoustic signals: underwater acoustic transients, high-frequency pulsed sonar transmissions and low-frequency continuous sound wave transmissions in air. In general, the propagation of sound in the underwater medium is found to be temporally invariant. An exception is the sporadic occurrence of nonstationary events during which time-varying bias errors in the source range and bearing estimates are observed over a period of minutes. When the underwater medium is stationary, the source position estimates are randomly distributed about the mean position and are bounded by a range-bearing error (or positional uncertainty) ellipse. When the underwater medium becomes nonstationary, the estimated position of the source falls outside this ellipse. Large passive ranging errors are observed for the in-air source because the atmosphere is a highly nonstationary sound propagation medium. Atmospheric turbulence causes perturbations in the curvature of the acoustic wavefronts; and leads to random fluctuations in the source position estimates on time scales ranging from seconds to minutes. Background noise at each sensor also contributes to the positional uncertainty of the in air source with random fluctuations in the source position estimates occurring on subsecond time scales. Detrending the data removes the effects of atmospheric turbulence and enables the smaller random errors attributed to background noise to be isolated for model validation purposes
Keywords :
acoustic arrays; acoustic wave propagation; array signal processing; atmospheric acoustics; atmospheric turbulence; delay estimation; error analysis; noise; sonar signal processing; underwater acoustic propagation; acoustic energy radiation; acoustic signals; air; atmospheric turbulence; background noise; bearing estimates; high-frequency pulsed sonar transmissions; intersensor time delays; linear array; low-frequency continuous sound wave transmissions; nonstationary events; nonstationary sound propagation medium; passive ranging; passive ranging errors; positional uncertainty; random fluctuations; range-bearing error; range-bearing error ellipse; sonar systems; source bearing; source position estimates; source range; sources localisation; spherical wavefronts expansion; stationary underwater medium; temporally invariant propagation; temporally varying sound propagation medium; time delay estimates; time-varying bias errors; underwater acoustic transients; wavefront curvature passive ranging; wavefront radius of curvature; wide-aperture receiving array; Acoustic propagation; Acoustic pulses; Acoustic waves; Background noise; Delay effects; Delay estimation; Fluctuations; Sonar; Uncertainty; Underwater acoustics;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
OCEANS, 2001. MTS/IEEE Conference and Exhibition
Conference_Location :
Honolulu, HI
Print_ISBN :
0-933957-28-9
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/OCEANS.2001.968368
Filename :
968368
Link To Document :
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