Abstract

Compressional-to-shear wave conversion at interfaces within unconsolidated marine sediments and interference of shear waves within thin sediment layers have been found to make significant contributions to sound attenuation [O. A. Godin, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 149, 3586–3598 (2021)] and produce unexpectedly strong perturbations in the normal mode group speed even when the shear speed is small compared to the compressional wave speed. This paper extends the previous analysis to the lateral waves and their applications to characterize the compressional wave speed and attenuation in the seabed. Shear wave-induced contributions to horizontal refraction of normal modes over horizontally inhomogeneous seabed are modeled to characterize the bearing and travel time errors that arise in the fluid-bottom approximation. The acoustic travel time and amplitude effects of the shear waves are found to accumulate at different rates with the propagation range depending on the stability of the shear wave interference within the seabed. The ways to distinguish between the manifestations in acoustic observables of the weak shear rigidity in the seabed and the other environmental uncertainties are discussed for range-independent, range-dependent, and horizontally inhomogeneous shallow-water waveguides. [Work supported by ONR.]

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