Modelling acoustic propagation beneath Antarctic sea ice using measured environmental parameters

Autonomous underwater vehicles are improving and expanding in situ observations of sea ice for the validation of satellite remote sensing and climate models. Missions under sea ice, particularly over large distances (up to 100 km) away from the immediate vicinity of a ship or base, require accurate...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alexander, PM, Duncan, A, Neil Bose, Guy Williams
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Modelling_acoustic_propagation_beneath_Antarctic_sea_ice_using_measured_environmental_parameters/22944170
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author Alexander, PM
Duncan, A
Neil Bose
Guy Williams
author_facet Alexander, PM
Duncan, A
Neil Bose
Guy Williams
author_sort Alexander, PM
collection Research from University Of Tasmania
description Autonomous underwater vehicles are improving and expanding in situ observations of sea ice for the validation of satellite remote sensing and climate models. Missions under sea ice, particularly over large distances (up to 100 km) away from the immediate vicinity of a ship or base, require accurate acoustic communication for monitoring, emergency response and some navigation systems. We investigate the propagation of acoustic signals in the Antarctic seasonal ice zone using the BELLHOP model, examining the influence of ocean and sea ice properties. We processed available observations from around Antarctica to generate input variables such as sound speed, surface reflection coefficient ( R ) and roughness parameters. The results show that changes in the sound speed profile make the most significant difference to the propagation of the direct path signal. The inclusion of the surface reflected signals from a flat ice surface was found to greatly decrease the transmission loss with range. When ice roughness was added, the transmission loss increased with roughness, in a manner similar to the direct path transmission loss results. The conclusions of this work are that: (1) the accuracy of acoustic modelling in this environment is greatly increased by using realistic sound speed data; (2) a risk averse ranging model would use only the direct path signal transmission; and (3) in a flat ice scenario, much greater ranges can be achieved if the surface reflected transmission paths are included. As autonomous missions under sea ice increase in scale and complexity, it will be increasingly important for operational procedures to include effective modelling of acoustic propagation with representative environmental data.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Sea ice
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Sea ice
geographic Antarctic
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
The Antarctic
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op_collection_id ftunivtasmanfig
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spelling ftunivtasmanfig:oai:figshare.com:article/22944170 2025-03-16T15:19:20+00:00 Modelling acoustic propagation beneath Antarctic sea ice using measured environmental parameters Alexander, PM Duncan, A Neil Bose Guy Williams 2016-01-01T00:00:00Z https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Modelling_acoustic_propagation_beneath_Antarctic_sea_ice_using_measured_environmental_parameters/22944170 unknown 102.100.100/568626 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Modelling_acoustic_propagation_beneath_Antarctic_sea_ice_using_measured_environmental_parameters/22944170 In Copyright Ocean engineering autonomous underwater vehicles Antarctica underwater acoustics BELLHOP Text Journal contribution 2016 ftunivtasmanfig 2025-02-17T09:48:20Z Autonomous underwater vehicles are improving and expanding in situ observations of sea ice for the validation of satellite remote sensing and climate models. Missions under sea ice, particularly over large distances (up to 100 km) away from the immediate vicinity of a ship or base, require accurate acoustic communication for monitoring, emergency response and some navigation systems. We investigate the propagation of acoustic signals in the Antarctic seasonal ice zone using the BELLHOP model, examining the influence of ocean and sea ice properties. We processed available observations from around Antarctica to generate input variables such as sound speed, surface reflection coefficient ( R ) and roughness parameters. The results show that changes in the sound speed profile make the most significant difference to the propagation of the direct path signal. The inclusion of the surface reflected signals from a flat ice surface was found to greatly decrease the transmission loss with range. When ice roughness was added, the transmission loss increased with roughness, in a manner similar to the direct path transmission loss results. The conclusions of this work are that: (1) the accuracy of acoustic modelling in this environment is greatly increased by using realistic sound speed data; (2) a risk averse ranging model would use only the direct path signal transmission; and (3) in a flat ice scenario, much greater ranges can be achieved if the surface reflected transmission paths are included. As autonomous missions under sea ice increase in scale and complexity, it will be increasingly important for operational procedures to include effective modelling of acoustic propagation with representative environmental data. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Sea ice Research from University Of Tasmania Antarctic The Antarctic
spellingShingle Ocean engineering
autonomous underwater vehicles
Antarctica
underwater acoustics
BELLHOP
Alexander, PM
Duncan, A
Neil Bose
Guy Williams
Modelling acoustic propagation beneath Antarctic sea ice using measured environmental parameters
title Modelling acoustic propagation beneath Antarctic sea ice using measured environmental parameters
title_full Modelling acoustic propagation beneath Antarctic sea ice using measured environmental parameters
title_fullStr Modelling acoustic propagation beneath Antarctic sea ice using measured environmental parameters
title_full_unstemmed Modelling acoustic propagation beneath Antarctic sea ice using measured environmental parameters
title_short Modelling acoustic propagation beneath Antarctic sea ice using measured environmental parameters
title_sort modelling acoustic propagation beneath antarctic sea ice using measured environmental parameters
topic Ocean engineering
autonomous underwater vehicles
Antarctica
underwater acoustics
BELLHOP
topic_facet Ocean engineering
autonomous underwater vehicles
Antarctica
underwater acoustics
BELLHOP
url https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Modelling_acoustic_propagation_beneath_Antarctic_sea_ice_using_measured_environmental_parameters/22944170