High-Frequency Bistatic Scattering from a Corrugated Sediment Surface

  • Cho, Hong-Sang (Department of Earth & Marine Sciences, Hanyang University) ;
  • La, Hyoung-Sul (Department of Earth & Marine Sciences, Hanyang University) ;
  • Yoon, Kwan-Seob (Department of Earth & Marine Sciences, Hanyang University) ;
  • Na, Jung-Yul (Department of Earth & Marine Sciences, Hanyang University) ;
  • Kim, Bong-Chae (Korea Ocean Research and Development Institute)
  • Published : 2006.06.01

Abstract

High-frequency bistatic scattering measurements from a corrugated surface were made in an acoustic water tank. First the azimuthal scattering pattern was measured from an artificially corrugated surface which has varying impedance. The corrugated surface was installed both transverse to the direction of incident wave and longitudinal to the direction of incident wave. The angle between the corrugated surface and the direction of the incident wave was about $45^{\circ}$. Second, the scattering strengths were measured from the flat sediment and the corrugated sediment. A critical angle of about $37^{\circ}$ was calculated in the acoustic water tank. The measurements were made at three fixed grazing angles: $33^{\circ}$ (lower than critical angle), $37^{\circ}$ (critical angle), and $41^{\circ}$ (higher than critical angle). The scattering angle and the grazing angle are equal in each measurement. Frequencies were from 50 kHz to 100 kHz with an increment of 1 kHz. The corrugated sediment was made transverse to the direction of the incident wave. The first measurement indicates that the scattering patterns depend on the relations between the corrugated surface and the direction of the incident wave. In the second measurement, the data measured from the flat sediment were compared to the APL-UW model and to the NRL model. The NRL model's output shows more favorable comparisons than the APL-UW model. In case of the corrugated sediment, the model and the measured data are different because the models used an isotropic wave spectrum of sediment roughness in the scattering calculations. The isotropic wave spectrum consists of $w_2$ and ${\gamma}_2$. These constants derived from sediment names or bulk size. The model which used the constants didn't consider the effect of a corrugated surface. In order to consider a corrugated surface, the constants were varied in the APL-UW model.

Keywords

References

  1. Xavier Lurton, An Introduction to Underwater Acoustics, (Chichester, UK, 2002)
  2. Stanic, S., E. Kennedy, and R. I. Ray, 'High-frequency bistatic reverberation from a smooth ocean bottom,' J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 93, 2633-2638, 1993 https://doi.org/10.1121/1.405837
  3. Boehme, H. N. P. Chotiros, L. D. Rolleigh, S. P. Pitt, A. L. Garcia, T. G. Goldsberry, and R. A. Lamb, 'Acoustic backscattering at low grazing angles from the ocean bottom, Part I, Bottom backscattering strength,' J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 77, 962-974, 1985 https://doi.org/10.1121/1.392064
  4. Nolle, A. W. and W. A. Hoyer, J. F. Mifsud, W. R. Runyan, and M. B. Ward, 'Acoustical properties of water-filled sands,' J. Acoust, Soc. Am., 35, 1394-1408, 1963 https://doi.org/10.1121/1.1918703
  5. Urick, R. J., 'Side scattering of sound in shallow water' J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 32, 351-355, 1959 https://doi.org/10.1121/1.1908061
  6. Choi, J. W., J. Na, K. Park, K. Yoon, J. S. Park, and Y. N. Na, 'Measurements of high-frequency sea surface backscattering signals,' J. Acoust. Soc. Korea, 21 (4) 421-429, 2002 (in Korean)
  7. Medwin, H. and C. S. Clay Fundamentals of Acoustical Oceanography, (Academic Press, Boston, 1998)
  8. Bass, F. G. and I. M. Fuks, Wave Scattering From Statistically Rough Surfaces, Tergamon, (New York, 1979)
  9. Eckart, C., 'The scattering of sound from the sea surface,' J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 25, 566-570, 1953 https://doi.org/10.1121/1.1907123
  10. Dahl, P. H., 'On bistatic sea surface scattering: Field measurements and modeling,' J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 105, 2155-2169, 1999 https://doi.org/10.1121/1.426820
  11. Thorsos, E. I., 'The validity of the Kirchhoff approximation for rough surface scattering using a Gaussian roughness spectrum,' J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 83, 78-92, 1988 https://doi.org/10.1121/1.396188
  12. Williams, N. J., 'An experiment to measure low frequency acoustic backscatter from the ocean wave surface-The acoustic surface reverberation experiment, ASREX,' Ph.D. thesis, University of Miami, 1996
  13. McDaniel, S. T. and A. D. Gorman, 'An examination of the composite-roughness scattering model,' J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 73, 1476-1486, 1983 https://doi.org/10.1121/1.389302
  14. Voronovich, A. G., Wave Scattering from Rough Surfaces, Springer- Verlag, (New York, 1993)
  15. APL-UW 'High-Frequency Ocean Environmental Acoustic Models Handbook', Ch. IV, Bottom, APL-UW TR 9407, October 1994
  16. NRL, 'Broadband Models for Predicting Bistatic Bottom, Surface, and Volume Scattering Strengths,' Technical Report NRL/FL/7100-02-10, 042, 2002
  17. Cox, H. 'Fundamentals of bistatic active sonar,' in Underwater Acoustic Data Processing, edited by Y. T. Chan, Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, 1988