Deep seafloor arrivals: An unexplained set of arrivals in long-range ocean acoustic propagation

TitleDeep seafloor arrivals: An unexplained set of arrivals in long-range ocean acoustic propagation
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2009
AuthorsStephen, RA, S. Bolmer, T, Dzieciuch, MA, Worcester, PF, Andrew, RK, Buck, LJ, Mercer, JA, Colosi, JA, Howe, BM
JournalThe Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
Volume126
Pagination599–606
Date Publishedaug
ISSN0001-4966
Abstract

Receptions, from a ship-suspended source (in the band 50–100Hz 50 – 100 Hz ) to an ocean bottom seismometer (about 5000m 5000 m depth) and the deepest element on a vertical hydrophone array (about 750m 750 m above the seafloor) that were acquired on the 2004 Long-Range Ocean Acoustic Propagation Experiment in the North Pacific Ocean, are described. The ranges varied from 50to3200km 50 to 3200 km . In addition to predicted ocean acoustic arrivals and deep shadow zone arrivals (leaking below turning points), “deep seafloor arrivals,” that are dominant on the seafloor geophone but are absent or very weak on the hydrophone array, are observed. These deep seafloor arrivals are an unexplained set of arrivals in ocean acoustics possibly associated with seafloor interface waves.

URLhttps://asa.scitation.org/doi/full/10.1121/1.3158826
DOI10.1121/1.3158826

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