SIMULATED TOMOGRAPHIC RECONSTRUCTION OF OCEAN FEATURES USING DRIFTING ACOUSTIC RECEIVERS AND A NAVIGATED SOURCE

TitleSIMULATED TOMOGRAPHIC RECONSTRUCTION OF OCEAN FEATURES USING DRIFTING ACOUSTIC RECEIVERS AND A NAVIGATED SOURCE
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1995
AuthorsDUDA TF, Pawlowicz R, Lynch JF, Cornuelle BD
JournalJOURNAL OF THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA
Volume98
Pagination2270-2279
Date PublishedOCT
ISSN0001-4966
Abstract

Numerically simulated acoustic transmission from a single source of known position (for example, suspended from a ship) to receivers of partially known position (for example, sonobuoys dropped from the air) are used for tomographic mapping of ocean sound speed. The maps are evaluated for accuracy and utility. Grids of 16 receivers are employed, with sizes of 150, 300, and 700 km square. Ordinary statistical measures are used to evaluate the pattern similarity and thus the mapping capability of the, system. For an array of 300 km square, quantitative error in the maps grows with receiver position uncertainty. The large and small arrays show lesser mapping capability than the mid-size array. Mapping errors increase with receiver position uncertainty for uncertainties less than 1000-m rms, but uncertainties exceeding that have less systematic effect on the maps. Maps of rms error of the field do not provide a complete view of the utility of the acoustic network. Features of maps are surprisingly reproducible for different navigation error levels, and give comparable information about mesoscale structures despite great variations in those levels. (C) 1995 Acoustical Society of America.

DOI10.1121/1.413341