Abstract

The frequency-difference and frequency-sum autoproducts, quadratic products of complex acoustic field amplitudes at two frequencies, may mimic genuine acoustic fields at the difference and sum frequencies of the constituent fields, respectively. Autoproducts have proven useful in extending the useable frequency range for acoustic remote sensing to frequencies outside a recorded field’s bandwidth. In array signal processing applications, the spatial coherence of the field often sets performance limits. This paper presents results for the spatial coherence of the genuine field, the frequency-difference autoproduct, and the frequency-sum autoproduct as determined from data collected during the Cascadia Open-Access Seismic Transects (COAST 2012) experiment. In this experiment, an airgun array providing a 10 to 200 Hz signal was repeatedly fired off the coast of Washington state, and the resulting acoustic fields were recorded by a nominal 8 km long, 636-element towed horizontal array. Based on hundreds of airgun firings from a primarily shore-parallel transect, both autoproducts were found to extend field coherence to frequencies outside the genuine field’s bandwidth and to produce longer coherence lengths than genuine fields, in most cases. When used for matched-field processing, the same data illustrate the benefits of the autoproducts’ extended coherence.

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