1. Deep sediment heterogeneity inferred using very low-frequency features from merchant shipsa).
- Author
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Hopps-McDaniel, Alexandra M., Neilsen, Tracianne B., Knobles, D. P., Hodgkiss, William S., Wilson, Preston S., and Sagers, Jason D.
- Subjects
MERCHANT ships ,ACOUSTIC arrays ,MARGINAL distributions ,ACOUSTICS ,GROUP velocity - Abstract
The very low-frequency noise from merchant ships provides a good broadband sound source to study the deep layers of the seabed. The nested striations that characterize ship time-frequency spectrograms contain unique acoustic features corresponding to where the waveguide invariant β becomes infinite. In this dataset, these features occur at frequencies between 20 and 80 Hz, where pairs of modal group velocities become equal. The goal of this study is to identify these β = ∞ frequencies in ship noise spectrograms and use them to perform statistical inference for the deep layer sound speeds and thicknesses in the New England Mudpatch for a larger number of ships and acoustic arrays over a larger geographical region than previously studied. Marginal probability distributions of the data indicate that using singular points for a feature-based inversion yields an estimate of the sound speed and a limiting value for the thickness of the first deep layer. Heterogeneity is examined by correlating spatial variability of the deep layer sound speeds with ship tracks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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