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- Title
Features of the Sound Field Structure in a Two-Channel Oceanic Waveguide.
- Authors
Galkin, O. P.; Shvachko, L. V.
- Abstract
The results of experimental studies of the energy and angular structure of a sound field in the region of the Iberian Basin in the northeastern Atlantic are discussed. The experiments are carried out in a two-channel waveguide whose axes are located at depths of approximately 450 and 2000 m. A continuous pseudonoise signal in the frequency range 2.5-4.0 kHz is emitted. The signals are received by the omnidirectional hydrophones and, simultaneously, by a 10-m-long vertical array, which allows one to realize a narrow beam reception (∼2.5°) in the vertical plane. The source and the receiver are located in a 500-m-thick layer within the upper sound channel. The field characteristics are measured in the course of a continuous change of distance from 1 to 65 km. The comparison of the experimental data with calculations shows that the sound field structure formed by the lower channel is much closer to the theoretical results than the structure formed by the upper channel. In the upper sound channel, the shadow zone manifests itself only slightly and the first convergence zone begins approximately 7-11 km nearer to the source than predicted by the calculations. The corresponding angular sound field structure is fairly pronounced in the vertical plane and bears no evidence of the random behavior that is peculiar to the fields scattered by the inhomogeneities.
- Subjects
UNDERWATER acoustics; WAVEGUIDES
- Publication
Acoustical Physics, 2001, Vol 47, Issue 3, p268
- ISSN
1063-7710
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1134/1.1371580