Antipodal receptions in global acoustics

Bibliography: leaves 96-97. === Global Acoustic Propagation is a recently developed scientific discipline within the study of long range underwater acoustic propagation. Acoustic propagation over extremely long ranges involves a combination of effects from earth curvature and the global distribution...

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Main Author: Courtney, Jennifer Susan
Other Authors: Brundrit, Geoff
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/9517
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-95172020-07-22T05:07:54Z Antipodal receptions in global acoustics Courtney, Jennifer Susan Brundrit, Geoff Oceanography Bibliography: leaves 96-97. Global Acoustic Propagation is a recently developed scientific discipline within the study of long range underwater acoustic propagation. Acoustic propagation over extremely long ranges involves a combination of effects from earth curvature and the global distribution of oceanographic and geophysical features. Antipodal receptions, that is to ranges of the order of 20Mm (1 Megameter = 1 000 km), require underwater acoustic propagation to very long ranges and thus effects due to the form of the earth and the range dependence of the sound speed field within the ocean can not be ignored. The purpose of this thesis is to investigate the nature of antipodal receptions with reference to the form of the earth and horizontal sound speed variations within the ocean and thereby contribute to the new and specialized field of study, Global Acoustic Propagation. Close to an acoustic source acoustic energy diverges so that local signal strengths decrease with distance from the source. However, as the antipodal region is approached acoustic energy that has not been blocked by bathymetric features will refocus, counteracting the distance loss rule. Thus at antipodal sites there is a good prospect of receiving a focused signal. Even so, the ellipsoidal form of the earth and the horizontal variability within the sound speed field of the ocean means that the re-focusing will result in a region of enhanced signal rather than an exact antipodal point. The precise detail of the advantage of placing receivers in the antipodal region will depend upon the paths taken by the acoustic energy and the characteristics of the acoustic medium encountered along each path. The proposal for this thesis is to develop an algorithm to determine the nature of the antipodal region under certain physical assumptions. The physical assumptions are referred to as the geometric assumption, which refers to the form of the earth, and the refractive assumption, which refers to the horizontal variability of sound speed within the world oceans. 2014-11-10T09:09:19Z 2014-11-10T09:09:19Z 1997 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/9517 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Science Department of Oceanography
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Oceanography
spellingShingle Oceanography
Courtney, Jennifer Susan
Antipodal receptions in global acoustics
description Bibliography: leaves 96-97. === Global Acoustic Propagation is a recently developed scientific discipline within the study of long range underwater acoustic propagation. Acoustic propagation over extremely long ranges involves a combination of effects from earth curvature and the global distribution of oceanographic and geophysical features. Antipodal receptions, that is to ranges of the order of 20Mm (1 Megameter = 1 000 km), require underwater acoustic propagation to very long ranges and thus effects due to the form of the earth and the range dependence of the sound speed field within the ocean can not be ignored. The purpose of this thesis is to investigate the nature of antipodal receptions with reference to the form of the earth and horizontal sound speed variations within the ocean and thereby contribute to the new and specialized field of study, Global Acoustic Propagation. Close to an acoustic source acoustic energy diverges so that local signal strengths decrease with distance from the source. However, as the antipodal region is approached acoustic energy that has not been blocked by bathymetric features will refocus, counteracting the distance loss rule. Thus at antipodal sites there is a good prospect of receiving a focused signal. Even so, the ellipsoidal form of the earth and the horizontal variability within the sound speed field of the ocean means that the re-focusing will result in a region of enhanced signal rather than an exact antipodal point. The precise detail of the advantage of placing receivers in the antipodal region will depend upon the paths taken by the acoustic energy and the characteristics of the acoustic medium encountered along each path. The proposal for this thesis is to develop an algorithm to determine the nature of the antipodal region under certain physical assumptions. The physical assumptions are referred to as the geometric assumption, which refers to the form of the earth, and the refractive assumption, which refers to the horizontal variability of sound speed within the world oceans.
author2 Brundrit, Geoff
author_facet Brundrit, Geoff
Courtney, Jennifer Susan
author Courtney, Jennifer Susan
author_sort Courtney, Jennifer Susan
title Antipodal receptions in global acoustics
title_short Antipodal receptions in global acoustics
title_full Antipodal receptions in global acoustics
title_fullStr Antipodal receptions in global acoustics
title_full_unstemmed Antipodal receptions in global acoustics
title_sort antipodal receptions in global acoustics
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/9517
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