Abstract

Classical beamforming algorithms are based on rectilinear propagation of signals that are corrupted by additive noise. However, sound waves propagating in the atmosphere are refracted by temperature and wind gradients and distorted by turbulence and scattering from the ground. These effects can reduce the performance of acoustic systems. To investigate these effects, a simulation capability is used to propagate signals from elevated sources to an array of microphones near the ground. Detection algorithms based on four standard beamforming algorithms, implemented with either no model mismatch error or model mismatch errors generated by atmospheric refraction, are tested. The results are evaluated using the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve statistic. The analysis shows no significant improvement in detection performance when refraction effects are included in the beamforming algorithms over a wide range of frequencies. Any small performance improvements achieved by incorporating refraction effects into the beamforming algorithms are overwhelmed by the negative effects of atmospheric turbulence and rough surface scattering. For the selected scenario, incorporating refraction effects into the beamformers is over-engineering. These results demonstrate some of the limitations of developing new signal processing algorithms or array designs for atmospheric acoustic systems.

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