Abstract

Internal solitary waves evolving with time in shallow water are known to affect sound propagation significantly. Unlike prior work studying the acoustic effects of individual internal-wave properties separately, this paper elucidates and evaluates the influence of a complete evolution process of internal waves on acoustic fields both theoretically and by the coupled ocean-acoustic simulation. Two evolving wave properties considered here are shape deformations including the variations of wave amplitudes and widths and packet dispersion manifested as the increasing wavelength (i.e., the distance between successive solitons). The acoustic modal intensity expressed by the Dyson series solution is reformulated to explicitly reveal the modulation effects induced by the deformation and dispersion of internal waves. Dispersion leads to modal interference and causes the intensity envelope to oscillate with the varying wavelength. Deformation modulates intensity in a non-oscillatory manner that is less predictable due to the complexity of amplitude and width variations. In the environment reconstructed from the field observations of internal waves in the South China Sea, the modal intensity simulated by the parabolic-equation model exhibits pronounced modulation effects, where the modal interference due to dispersion dominates the intensity-envelope shape, and deformation affects the extremum positions of envelopes.

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