Abstract
Measurements of low-frequency (70–1000 Hz) sea surface backscattering strength were made in the Gulf of Alaska during February–March 1992 as part of a surface backscatter and air–sea interaction experiment. The measurements described here used explosive charges (SUS MK-59 MOD1a) as sources and a towed horizontal line array of hydrophones as receiver. The experiment objective was to measure surface backscattering strength as a function of frequency, grazing angle, and environmental conditions of the air–sea boundary. Scattering strengths were obtained during 18 tests (each of duration approximately 30 min) conducted from 24 February to 1 March for wind speeds that varied from approximately 4 to 18 m/s. The experiment uses a direct path test geometry for which the measured surface backscatter originated from surface/near-surface regions at ranges of several km or less. Surface grazing angles for these measurements varied from about 5 to 30 deg. Results are compared to earlier surface scatter measurements below 1000 Hz and are interpreted relative to concurrent air–sea boundary environmental measurements.
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