Abstract
The dynamic imaging of a gravity wave propagating at the air-water interface is a complex task that requires the sampling of every point at this interface during the gravity wave propagation. Using two source-receiver vertical arrays facing each other in a shallow water environment, we manage to isolate and identify each multi-reverberated eigenbeam that interacts with the air-water interface. The travel-time and amplitude variations of each eigenbeam are then measured during the crossing of the gravity wave. In this work, we present an ultrasonic experiment in a 1 m-long, 5 cm-deep waveguide at the laboratory scale. The waveguide transfer matrix is recorded 100 times per second at a sample rate of 1.1 MHz between two source-receiver arrays while a low-amplitude gravity wave is generated by a laser-induced breakdown at the middle of the waveguide above the water surface. The controlled and therefore repeatable breakdown causes a blast wave that interacts with the air-water interface and penetrates into the water, creating ripples at the surface that propagate in both directions. The surface deformation induced by these two wave packets is also measured by two cameras which allows for independent validation of the ultrasonic inversion. The ultrasonic inversion performed from a few thousand eigenbeams lead to accurate quantitative imaging of the dynamic of the air-water interface, using either the travel-time or the amplitude variation of the ultrasonic arrivals.
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