Abstract

Bispectral analysis is a statistical tool for detecting and identifying a nonlinear stochastic signal-generating mechanism from data containing its output. Bispectral analysis can also be employed to investigate whether the observed data record is consistent with the hypothesis that the underlying stochastic process has Gaussian distribution. From estimates of bispectra of several records of ambient acoustic ocean noise, a newly developed statistical method for testing whether the noise has a Gaussian distribution, and whether it contains evidence of nonlinearity in the underlying mechanisms generating the observed noise is applied. Seven acoustic records from three environments are examined: the Atlantic south of Bermuda, the northeast Pacific, and the Indian Ocean. The collection of time series represents both ambient acoustic noise (no local shipping) and noise dominated by local shipping. The three ambient records appeared to be both linear and Gaussian processes when examined over a period on the order of a minute, but were found to be nonlinear and non-Gaussian when examined over shorter time periods on the order of a second. In each case the time series dominated by local shipping noise tested to be nonlinear and non-Gaussian over both short and long time periods.

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