Abstract

The ranges derived from acoustic measurements between seafloor stations are relatively more accurate compared with those derived from the sea surface vessel transducer to the seafloor transponders, because measurements through mixed water layers will be affected by complex acoustic range errors. Coordinates of seafloor stations can be improved by the direct-path acoustic ranging. Systematic errors in acoustic rangings, however, will significantly deteriorate the accuracy of vertical coordinates. In order to mitigate the effects of these systematic errors (e.g., acoustic ray bending and sound speed variation errors in acoustic measurements on the seafloor station location parameters), the observation model needs to be finely constructed. First, a new observation model with acoustic ray bending and sound speed bias parameters is established. Then, using a seafloor geodetic network with four moored stations at a depth of about 3000 m in the South China Sea, the significance of the acoustic ray bending parameter is tested. The results show that (1) the acoustic ray bending parameter is significant at the 90% confidence level, which means that the acoustic ray bending error in the seafloor geodetic network is not negligible; (2) by estimating the coefficient of acoustic ray bending, the influence of the acoustic ray bending error on the vertical coordinate components can be significantly mitigated; our model improves the accuracy of the seafloor stations’ position with differences in the horizontal coordinate components less than 0.1 cm between the two-dimensional adjustment and three-dimensional adjustment, and also improves the vertical coordinate component to uncertainty less than 3.0 cm; (3) the relative movement between the moored stations is less than 50 cm, and the horizontal movement is larger than the vertical movement.

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