Abstract

The results of an experiment to characterize the underwater sound field radiated by various breaking waves intensities in fresh water in the range from 0.1 to 20 kHz are described. Waves are generated by a computer-controlled plunging-type wave maker and propagate along a 12.7-m-long channel where they are made to break at the mid-surface of a 3-×3-×2.5-m anechoic water tank. The individual bubbles and bubble clouds entrained by the breaking wave provide a mechanism for sound production. Using high-speed cinephotography, correlations were established between the hydrodynamic evolution of the cloud and the radiated acoustic emissions. The bubble size distributions inside the cloud were measured with the aid of a high-speed video camera and a fiber optic cable. These measurements indicate that single bubbles with radii as large as 7–8 mm may be entrained in this fresh-water system by moderate spilling breakers. Detailed measurements of the bubble size distribution of the bubble cloud enabled us also to obtain a measurement of the average void fraction in the cloud. These observations reveal that the sources of sound in laboratory spilling breakers is due mostly to single bubble oscillations that can have frequencies as low as 400 Hz; in the case of plunging breakers, it appears that both individual bubbles and bubble clouds can contribute to the acoustic emissions. The acoustic radiation from bubble clouds is the result of collective oscillations of the bubbles, stimulated by large scale vortices created by the plunging breaker. The sound spectra, averaged over 100 breakers, reveal the following observations. First, the peak frequencies of the average sound spectra shifts from few kHz (weak, spilling breaker) to few hundred Hz (plunging breaker). Second, the sound pressure levels increase in all frequency bands with increasing breaker severity. Lastly, the high-frequency portions of the sound spectra have slopes of about 5–6 dB/oct, which are the slopes observed for the noise spectra of the ocean. These results provide considerable insight into the likely source mechanisms for ocean ambient noise.

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