Browsing Reprints by Subject "Sound attenuation"
Now showing items 1-12 of 12
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Attenuation of shear waves in near-surface sediments
(NATO. SACLANTCEN, 1997)In situ measurement of compressional and shear speed and compressional attenuation in near-surface marine sediments is a well-developed technology but techniques required to measure shear attenuation have lagged behind. ... -
Dynamic attenuation extraction of seafloor sediments from very high resolution acoustic data
(NATO. SACLANTCEN, 1997)An approach to acquire geophysical information of seabed sediments as derrved from acoustic attenuation rs described. Using thefrequencies corresponding to the signal power spectrum maximum and a point 3 dB below, signal ... -
Effect of ship motion on sonar detection performance
(NATO. SACLANTCEN, 1975/10)For an unstabilized transducer, the effect of ship motion on sonar echoes is twofold: 1. Attenuation caused by the rotational movement of the transducer in the vertical plane. The results show that the different loss figures ... -
Estimation of chirp sonar signal attenuation for classification of marine sediments: improved spectral ratio method
(NATO. SACLANTCEN, 1997)Remote sediment classification through acoustic methods is of great interest for a few years. The attenuation coefficient of the transmitted wave is an important feature to characterize physical sediment layers properties. ... -
Interface wave studies on the Ligurian shelf usingan OBS array: experimental results and propagation models
(NATO. SACLANTCEN, 1986/06)Seismic waves travelling in the water/sediment or subbottom sediment/sediment interface have been the subject of considerable interest in recent years. Experiments have confirmed the existence of interface waves in different ... -
Refraction of sound in the sea floor
(NATO. SACLANTCEN, 1975/10)A major mode of propagation of acoustic energy at low frequencies is a shallow refracted path through unconsolidated sediments of the sea floor. Successful modelling of the bottom-refracted mode of propagation requires ... -
Relative contribution of surface roughness and bottom attenuation to propagation loss in shallow water
(NATO. SACLANTCEN, 1975/10)A simulation study has been performed to investigate the relative importance of the contributions of surface roughness and bottom attenuation to propagation loss under differing environmental conditionso The NRL normal ... -
Spatial variability of surficial shallow water sediment geoacoustic properties
(NATO. SACLANTCEN, 1986/06)Variability of surficial sediment geoacoustic properties was determined from cores collected at eight shallow-water continental shelf regions in the U.S., Italy and Australia. Highly porous muds found in low energy ... -
The effect of suspended particulate matter on the performance of high frequency sonars in turbid coastal waters
(NATO. SACLANTCEN, 1997)Shallow coastal environments are characterised by high levels of suspended mineral particles relative lo the open ocean and such suspensions can have a significant effect on the performance of high frequency sonars operating ... -
The optimum frequency of propagation in shallow-water environments
(NATO. SACLANTCEN, 1983/04)The optimum frequency of propagation in shallow water environments is the result of competing propagation and attenuation mechanisms at high and low frequencies. It is shown that the optimum frequency is strongly dependent ... -
Time domain finite difference methods for range dependent Biot media
(NATO. SACLANTCEN, 1997)The physics of sound propagation in saturated, porous (Biot) media differs from propagation in fluids and elastic/anelastic solids because of the existence of a second compressional wave, the "slow" wave. Many environments ...