Shallow water reverberation measurement and prediction

Low frequency active sonar performance in shallow water is often limited by reverberation. Reverberation modeling in shallow water has been difficult due to the complexity of the multipath acoustic propagation problem inherent in shallow environments. In August 1992, a shallow water, low-frequency r...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Muggleworth, Charles E.
Other Authors: Miller, James H., Chiu, Ching-Sang, Naval Postgraduate School, Electrical Engineering, Engineering Acoustics
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 1994
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10945/28529
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spelling ftnavalpschool:oai:calhoun.nps.edu:10945/28529 2024-06-09T07:45:00+00:00 Shallow water reverberation measurement and prediction Muggleworth, Charles E. Miller, James H. Chiu, Ching-Sang Naval Postgraduate School Electrical Engineering Engineering Acoustics 1994-06 73 p.;28 cm. application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/10945/28529 en_US eng Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School https://hdl.handle.net/10945/28529 Electrical Engineering Thesis 1994 ftnavalpschool 2024-05-15T00:39:30Z Low frequency active sonar performance in shallow water is often limited by reverberation. Reverberation modeling in shallow water has been difficult due to the complexity of the multipath acoustic propagation problem inherent in shallow environments. In August 1992, a shallow water, low-frequency reverberation measurement was made in the Barents Sea utilizing explosive signal, underwater sound (SUS) charges as sound sources and a 16-element vertical hydrophone array as the receiver. The objectives of this thesis were to analyze the reverberation data from this experiment, compare several theories which have been proposed to model reverberation, and determine the reverberant characteristics of the region. The three-dimensional Hamiltonian Acoustic Ray- tracing Program for the Ocean (HARPO) was used as the primary propagation modeling tool. The temporal signal processing consisted of a short-time Fourier transform spectral estimation method applied to data from a single hydrophone. Chapman's source spectrum model was used. Reverberation models based on Lambert's law and omnidirectional backscattering theory were compared. Lambert's law was found to be more applicable in the Barents Sea. A statistical analysis was performed on broadband and narrowband hydrophone data showing that reverberation in the Barents Sea possesses Gaussian properties Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited. Lieutenant, United States Navy http://archive.org/details/shallowwaterreve1094528529 Thesis Barents Sea Naval Postgraduate School: Calhoun Barents Sea
institution Open Polar
collection Naval Postgraduate School: Calhoun
op_collection_id ftnavalpschool
language English
topic Electrical Engineering
spellingShingle Electrical Engineering
Muggleworth, Charles E.
Shallow water reverberation measurement and prediction
topic_facet Electrical Engineering
description Low frequency active sonar performance in shallow water is often limited by reverberation. Reverberation modeling in shallow water has been difficult due to the complexity of the multipath acoustic propagation problem inherent in shallow environments. In August 1992, a shallow water, low-frequency reverberation measurement was made in the Barents Sea utilizing explosive signal, underwater sound (SUS) charges as sound sources and a 16-element vertical hydrophone array as the receiver. The objectives of this thesis were to analyze the reverberation data from this experiment, compare several theories which have been proposed to model reverberation, and determine the reverberant characteristics of the region. The three-dimensional Hamiltonian Acoustic Ray- tracing Program for the Ocean (HARPO) was used as the primary propagation modeling tool. The temporal signal processing consisted of a short-time Fourier transform spectral estimation method applied to data from a single hydrophone. Chapman's source spectrum model was used. Reverberation models based on Lambert's law and omnidirectional backscattering theory were compared. Lambert's law was found to be more applicable in the Barents Sea. A statistical analysis was performed on broadband and narrowband hydrophone data showing that reverberation in the Barents Sea possesses Gaussian properties Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited. Lieutenant, United States Navy http://archive.org/details/shallowwaterreve1094528529
author2 Miller, James H.
Chiu, Ching-Sang
Naval Postgraduate School
Electrical Engineering
Engineering Acoustics
format Thesis
author Muggleworth, Charles E.
author_facet Muggleworth, Charles E.
author_sort Muggleworth, Charles E.
title Shallow water reverberation measurement and prediction
title_short Shallow water reverberation measurement and prediction
title_full Shallow water reverberation measurement and prediction
title_fullStr Shallow water reverberation measurement and prediction
title_full_unstemmed Shallow water reverberation measurement and prediction
title_sort shallow water reverberation measurement and prediction
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 1994
url https://hdl.handle.net/10945/28529
geographic Barents Sea
geographic_facet Barents Sea
genre Barents Sea
genre_facet Barents Sea
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/10945/28529
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