DocumentCode :
990003
Title :
Inferences on seabed acoustics in the East China Sea from distributed acoustic measurements
Author :
Knobles, David P. ; Yudichak, Thomas W. ; Koch, Robert A. ; Cable, Peter G. ; Miller, James H. ; Potty, Gopu R.
Author_Institution :
Appl. Res. Labs., Univ. of Texas, Austin, TX
Volume :
31
Issue :
1
fYear :
2006
Firstpage :
129
Lastpage :
144
Abstract :
Low-frequency acoustic data acquired in the central East China Sea basin at two locations are analyzed for the purpose of making inferences on seabed acoustics. Previous geophysical studies indicate that the first sediment layer is composed of a fine to medium sand. The current analysis employs octave-averaged transmission loss (TL) versus range data and pressure time series generated from explosive sources. The TL and time series data were collected in locations separated by about 65 km during the same month of the year. Both locations are near the same longitude, with water depths of 100-120 m. A linear frequency dependence of the attenuation in the 25-800 Hz band, with or without sound speed dispersion, leads to a geoacoustic solution using the TL data consistent with a soft clay, and thus inconsistent with the existing geophysical data. However, seabed representations that allow for a nonlinear frequency dependence of the attenuation, such as a Kramers-Kronig dispersion relationship, a simplified six-parameter Biot description, and an empirical frequency power law of the attenuation, all give similar values of the attenuation as a function of frequency and sediment sound speeds that are consistent with the previous geophysical studies in the area. Geoacoustic solutions obtained with the TL inversions produce reasonably good fits to the measured time series data. Inversions of the time series indicate that the sound speed at the top of the sediment is lower as compared to the values estimated from the location where the TL data were acquired. While the data have significant limitations as to the information they contain on the properties of the seabed, the analysis aids in quantifying the sensitivity of geoacoustic inversion of acoustic data in shallow water littoral regions to assumptions about the frequency dependence of attenuation and sound speed
Keywords :
oceanography; seafloor phenomena; sediments; time series; underwater sound; 100 to 120 m; 25 to 800 Hz; Biot description; East China Sea; Kramers-Kronig dispersion; attenuation; distributed acoustic measurements; frequency power law; geoacoustic inversion; geoacoustic solution; nonlinear frequency dependence; octave-averaged transmission loss; seabed acoustics; seabed representations; sediment sound; time series; Acoustic measurements; Attenuation; Dispersion; Explosives; Frequency dependence; Geophysical measurements; Propagation losses; Sea measurements; Sediments; Time series analysis; Geoacoustic inversion; normal modes; seabed acoustics; shallow water;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Oceanic Engineering, IEEE Journal of
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0364-9059
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JOE.2006.872217
Filename :
1645251
Link To Document :
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