Declercq Nico F, Briers Rudy, Leroy Oswald
Interdisciplinary Research Center, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Kortrijk, Belgium.
Ultrasonics. 2002 May;40(1-8):345-8. doi: 10.1016/s0041-624x(02)00119-1.
Zero order reflected sound from a singly corrugated interface between a solid and a liquid, insonified from the solid side by circular polarized shear waves, can become almost perfect linearly polarized in a direction parallel or perpendicular to the corrugations, depending on the frequency, and can therefore reveal the direction of the corrugations. When narrow bounded beams, formed by a summation of infinite plane waves, are diffracted at certain frequencies, depending on the angle of incidence, or vice versa, one can predict phenomena like backscattering at Bragg-angle incidence and also the creation of Scholte-Stoneley waves.