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LOAPEX: The Long-Range Ocean Acoustic Propagation EXperiment

Authors :
Bruce M. Howe
Ralph A. Stephen
Peter F. Worcester
James A. Mercer
John A. Colosi
Matthew A. Dzieciuch
Source :
IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering. 34:1-11
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), 2009.

Abstract

This paper provides an overview of the experimental goals and methods of the Long-range Ocean Acoustic Propagation EXperiment (LOAPEX), which took place in the northeast Pacific Ocean between September 10, 2004 and October 10, 2004. This experiment was designed to address a number of unresolved issues in long-range, deep-water acoustic propagation including the effect of ocean fluctuations such as internal waves on acoustic signal coherence, and the scattering of low-frequency sound, in particular, scattering into the deep acoustic shadow zone. Broadband acoustic transmissions centered near 75 Hz were made from various depths to a pair of vertical hydrophone arrays covering 3500 m of the water column, and to several bottom-mounted horizontal line arrays distributed throughout the northeast Pacific Ocean Basin. Path lengths varied from 50 km to several megameters. Beamformed receptions on the horizontal arrays contained 10-20-ms tidal signals, in agreement with a tidal model. Fifteen consecutive receptions on one of the vertical line arrays with a source range of 3200 km showed the potential for incoherent averaging. Finally, shadow zone receptions were observed on an ocean bottom seismometer at a depth of 5000 m from a source at 3200-250-km range.

Details

ISSN :
03649059
Volume :
34
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........aefddf6329d97299451faef1c6a72b70
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1109/joe.2008.2010656