Acoustic scattering from sand dollars (dendraster excentricus) modeling as high aspect ratio oblate objects and comparison to experiment

CIVINS === Benthic shells can contribute greatly to the scattering variability of the ocean bottom, particularly at low grazing angles. Among the effects of shell aggregates are increased scattering strength and potential subcritical angle penetration of the seafloor. Sand dollars (Dendraster excent...

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Main Author: Dietzen, Gregory C.
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Published: Cambridge Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/3694
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-36942014-11-27T16:04:47Z Acoustic scattering from sand dollars (dendraster excentricus) modeling as high aspect ratio oblate objects and comparison to experiment Dietzen, Gregory C. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. CIVINS Benthic shells can contribute greatly to the scattering variability of the ocean bottom, particularly at low grazing angles. Among the effects of shell aggregates are increased scattering strength and potential subcritical angle penetration of the seafloor. Sand dollars (Dendraster excentricus) occur commonly in the ocean and have been shown to be significant scatters of sound. In order to understand more fully the scattering mechanisms of these organisms, the scattering from individual sand dollars was studied using several methods. Using an approximation to the Helmholtz-Kirchhoff integral, the Kirchhoff method gives an analytic integral expression to the backscattering from an object. This integral was first solved analytically for a disk and a spherical cap, two high aspect ratio oblate shapes which simplify the shape of an individual sand dollar. A method for solving the Kirchhoff integral numerically was then developed. An exact three dimensional model of a sand dollar test was created from computed tomography scans. The Kirchhoff integral was then solved numerically for this model of the sand dollar. The finite element method, a numerical technique for approximating the solutions to partial differential equations and integral equations, was used to model the scattering from an individual sand dollar as well. COMSOL Multiphysics was used for the implementation of the finite element method. Modeling results were compared with published laboratory experimental data from the free field scattering of both an aluminum disk and a sand dollar. Insight on the scattering mechanisms of individual sand dollar, including elastic behavior and diffraction effects, was gained from these comparisons. 2012-03-14T17:39:06Z 2012-03-14T17:39:06Z 2008-09 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/3694 662524825 Approved for public release, distribution unlimited Cambridge Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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description CIVINS === Benthic shells can contribute greatly to the scattering variability of the ocean bottom, particularly at low grazing angles. Among the effects of shell aggregates are increased scattering strength and potential subcritical angle penetration of the seafloor. Sand dollars (Dendraster excentricus) occur commonly in the ocean and have been shown to be significant scatters of sound. In order to understand more fully the scattering mechanisms of these organisms, the scattering from individual sand dollars was studied using several methods. Using an approximation to the Helmholtz-Kirchhoff integral, the Kirchhoff method gives an analytic integral expression to the backscattering from an object. This integral was first solved analytically for a disk and a spherical cap, two high aspect ratio oblate shapes which simplify the shape of an individual sand dollar. A method for solving the Kirchhoff integral numerically was then developed. An exact three dimensional model of a sand dollar test was created from computed tomography scans. The Kirchhoff integral was then solved numerically for this model of the sand dollar. The finite element method, a numerical technique for approximating the solutions to partial differential equations and integral equations, was used to model the scattering from an individual sand dollar as well. COMSOL Multiphysics was used for the implementation of the finite element method. Modeling results were compared with published laboratory experimental data from the free field scattering of both an aluminum disk and a sand dollar. Insight on the scattering mechanisms of individual sand dollar, including elastic behavior and diffraction effects, was gained from these comparisons.
author2 Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
author_facet Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Dietzen, Gregory C.
author Dietzen, Gregory C.
spellingShingle Dietzen, Gregory C.
Acoustic scattering from sand dollars (dendraster excentricus) modeling as high aspect ratio oblate objects and comparison to experiment
author_sort Dietzen, Gregory C.
title Acoustic scattering from sand dollars (dendraster excentricus) modeling as high aspect ratio oblate objects and comparison to experiment
title_short Acoustic scattering from sand dollars (dendraster excentricus) modeling as high aspect ratio oblate objects and comparison to experiment
title_full Acoustic scattering from sand dollars (dendraster excentricus) modeling as high aspect ratio oblate objects and comparison to experiment
title_fullStr Acoustic scattering from sand dollars (dendraster excentricus) modeling as high aspect ratio oblate objects and comparison to experiment
title_full_unstemmed Acoustic scattering from sand dollars (dendraster excentricus) modeling as high aspect ratio oblate objects and comparison to experiment
title_sort acoustic scattering from sand dollars (dendraster excentricus) modeling as high aspect ratio oblate objects and comparison to experiment
publisher Cambridge Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/3694
work_keys_str_mv AT dietzengregoryc acousticscatteringfromsanddollarsdendrasterexcentricusmodelingashighaspectratiooblateobjectsandcomparisontoexperiment
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