Sensors (Dec 2020)
Characteristics of Very Low Frequency Sound Propagation in Full Waveguides of Shallow Water
Abstract
This work is concerned with the characteristics of very low frequency sound propagation (VLF, ≤100 Hz) in the shallow marine environment. Under these conditions, the classical hypothesis of considering the sea bottom as a fluid environment is no longer appropriate, and the sound propagation characteristics at the sea bottom should be also considered. Hence, based on the finite element method (FEM), and setting the sea bottom as an elastic medium, a proposed model which unifies the sea water and sea bottom is established, and the propagation characteristics in full waveguides of shallow water can be synchronously discussed. Using this model, the effects of the sea bottom topography and the various geoacoustic parameters on VLF sound propagation and its corresponding mechanisms are investigated through numerical examples and acoustic theory. The simulation results demonstrate the adaptability of the proposed model to complex shallow water waveguides and the accuracy of the calculated acoustic field. For the sea bottom topography, the greater the inclination angle of an up-sloping sea bottom, the stronger the leak of acoustic energy to the sea bottom, and the more rapid the attenuation of the acoustic energy in sea water. The effect of a down-sloping sea bottom on acoustic energy is the opposite. Moreover, the greater the pressure wave (P-wave) speed in the sea bottom, the more acoustic energy remains in the water rather than leaking into the bottom; the influence laws of the density and the shear wave (S-wave) speed in the sea bottom are opposite.
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