A two-component Arctic ambient noise model
Short term Arctic ambient noise spectra over the frequency band 2 - 200 Hz are presented along with a two component noise model capable of reproducing these spectra. The model is based on the measured source spectrum and the spatial, temporal and source level distributions of both active pressure...
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Language: | English |
Published: |
2009
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/2429/6916 |
Summary: | Short term Arctic ambient noise spectra over the frequency band 2 - 200
Hz are presented along with a two component noise model capable of reproducing
these spectra. The model is based on the measured source spectrum and the spatial,
temporal and source level distributions of both active pressure ridging and thermal
ice cracking. Modeled ambient noise levels are determined by summing the input
energy of the distributions of ice cracking and pressure ridging events and removing
the propagation loss.
Measurements were obtained on a 22-element vertical array along with a 7-element
horizontal array deployed beneath the Arctic pack ice in 420 meters of water. Over
900 thermal ice-cracking events were detected in approximately 2 hours of data col
lected over several days during April 1988. The source directivity for events beyond
40 wavelengths range was found to be accurately represented by a dipole with an
approximate 3 dB increase above the dipole directivity pattern near 60° - 65° caused
by the leaked longitudinal plate wave. A technique for measuring the bottom reflectivity function by correcting the bottom reflection of a thermal ice crack for the
measured directivity is presented. The spatial distribution of thermal ice-cracking
events is consistent with a uniform distribution. Source levels were measured from
110 to 180 dB //μPa²/ Hz at 1 m with the distribution of all events approximating a
linearly decreasing function on a log-dB scale of the number of events versus source
level.
Near the end of the data collection period, measurements from a nearby active
pressure ridge were obtained. Evidence is presented that the infrasonic peak observed
near 10 Hz in Arctic ambient noise spectra may result from a frequency dependent
propagation loss acting on the source spectrum of pressure ridging.
Both modeled and measured ambient noise spectra show that ice cracking may
dominate the spring-time ambient noise to frequencies as low 40 Hz. Below 40 Hz, the
ambient noise is dominated by a single or few active pressure ridges at ranges of tens
of kilometers. Above 40 Hz, the ambient noise is dominated by a large distribution of
thermal ice-cracking events with over 50% of the total noise level produced by events
within 6 km range and over 80% produced by events within 30 km range. |
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