High-Frequency Underwater Acoustic Propagation in a Port Modeled as a Three-Dimensional Duct Closed at One End Using the Method of Images
Author(s) -
Pierre-Philippe Beaujean,
Matthew D. Staska
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
advances in acoustics and vibration
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.237
H-Index - 14
eISSN - 1687-627X
pISSN - 1687-6261
DOI - 10.1155/2012/929174
Subject(s) - acoustics , underwater , duct (anatomy) , impulse response , impulse (physics) , frequency band , approximation error , geology , underwater acoustics , engineering , physics , telecommunications , computer science , bandwidth (computing) , mathematics , medicine , mathematical analysis , oceanography , pathology , quantum mechanics , algorithm
A computer-efficient model for underwater acoustic propagation in a shallow, three-dimensional rectangular duct closed at one end has been developed using the method of images. The duct simulates a turning basin located in a port, surrounded with concrete walls, and filled with sea water. The channel bottom is composed of silt. The modeled impulse response is compared with the impulse response measured between 15 kHz and 33 kHz. Despite small sensor-position inaccuracies and an approximated duct geometry, the impulse response can be modeled with a relative echo magnitude error of 1.62 dB at worst and a relative echo location error varying between 0% and 4% when averaged across multiple measurements and sensor locations. This is a sufficient level of accuracy for the simulation of an acoustic communication system operating in the same frequency band and in shallow waters, as time fluctuations in echo magnitude commonly reach 10 dB in this type of environment
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