Abstract

The shear wave speed is often small compared to the compressional wave speed in unconsolidated marine sediments. Sediment stratification and especially mass density variation in the seabed enhance the effects of weak shear on acoustic normal modes in range-independent ocean and produce significant shear wave contributions to mode attenuation in shallow water [O. A. Godin, J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 149, 3586–3598 (2021)]. A distinctive feature of the shear-induced perturbations in the mode phase speed and attenuation is their rapid variation with sound frequency due to shear wave interference within a sediment layer. This paper investigates theoretically the shear wave-induced perturbations in normal mode phase, travel time, and attenuation when water depth and/or sediment layer thickness vary gradually with range. Frequency dependencies of the adiabatic normal mode travel time and attenuation are found to be highly sensitive to range dependence of the seabed layering. Gradual changes in the sediment layer thickness have an effect similar to frequency averaging or artificially increased shear wave attenuation. Implications of these findings for geoacoustic inversions will be discussed. Contributions of shear rigidity and cross-range gradients of the sediment layer thickness to horizontal refraction of normal modes will be also examined. [Work supported by ONR.]

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