Code 7160, Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, D.C., 20375, USA.
Sci Rep. 2019 Jun 6;9(1):8323. doi: 10.1038/s41598-019-44707-0.
Acoustic data from the Canada Basin Acoustic Propagation Experiment are discussed. These recordings were obtained under seasonally varying sea ice to the north of Alaska during a period of 154 days. They contain signals from sources that were deployed at ranges of 17.5, 29.6, and 237.8 km and ambient sounds from marine mammals and ice-related events. After the area was covered with ice, the amplitude of receptions from the most distant source gradually decreased as scattering features on the underside of the ice developed during fracturing, drifting, ridging, and rafting events. Improvements are presented for an Arctic acoustic model that is based on the parabolic equation method, and the approach is applied to a problem in which variable ice thickness acts as a loss mechanism by scattering energy out of the waveguide. Some of the recordings have a harmonic signature that is believed to be associated with the resonances of ice floes rubbing together, but variations in the harmonics over short time scales cannot be explained in terms of the resonances of an isolated floe. This behavior may be related to the coupling of vibrations at contact points that vary during the relative motions of floes.
讨论了来自加拿大盆地声传播实验的声数据。这些记录是在阿拉斯加北部季节性变化的海冰下获得的,持续了 154 天。它们包含了来自距离为 17.5、29.6 和 237.8 公里的源的信号,以及来自海洋哺乳动物和与冰有关的事件的环境声音。该区域被冰覆盖后,随着冰下的破碎、漂流、脊和筏形成散射特征,来自最远距离源的接收幅度逐渐减小。本文提出了一种基于抛物线方程方法的北极声传播模型的改进方法,并将该方法应用于一个问题中,其中可变的冰厚作为一种散射能量离开波导的损耗机制。一些记录具有谐波特征,据信与冰块相互摩擦的共振有关,但在短时间尺度上的谐波变化不能用孤立冰块的共振来解释。这种行为可能与冰块相对运动过程中接触点的振动耦合有关。