Abstract

In 2017 and 2022, a series of experiments using explosive sound sources were conducted on the New England Mud Patch (NEMP), an area of the Eastern US Continental shelf defined by its thick muddy seafloor sediments. Broadband measurements from the near-bottom Intensity Vector Acoustic Recorders (IVARs) reveal resonant frequencies in the bottom reflected signals, which are excited at very low-grazing angles. A signal model based on a layered-bottom reflection coefficient is used to examine the geoacoustic properties of the marine mud, which leads to the conclusion that the sound-speed contrast across the water-mud interface (i.e. index of refraction, n) is less than one (n < 1), and also an increase in sound-speed occurs within the deeper mud-sediments (n > 1). Measurements in May 2022, replicating the same source and receiver locations from March 2017, also show resonances in the bottom-reflected signal. Differences between the two data sets (2017 and 2022) are primarily caused by the complex oceanography encountered during the spring-time measurements, absent during the isothermal winter conditions. Comparison of the two datasets examines the stability of the sound-speed contrast, including the effect of time-varying temperature at the water-mud interface.

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