Abstract

Some directional characteristics of observed clutter and reverberation are presented using line arrays with cardioid elements. It is shown that the cardioid arrays break the left/right ambiguity for reverberation sources above ~600-700 Hz. Data analysis uses a cardioid beamforming algorithm developed by researchers at the NATO Undersea Research Centre (NURC, La Spezia, Italy) but the normalization for this algorithm is derived by the author. It is shown that this normalized algorithm has an upper frequency limitation not previously noted. Reverberation data are taken from two recent experiments. One was the 2004 Boundary Characterization Experiment near the Malta Plateau. The area is rich in clutter objects like wrecks and mud-volcanoes and has some subbottom features that may be important. Sources were monostatic coherent pulses and impulsive sources. The receiver was the NURC cardioid array. The other experiment was the U.S. Office of Naval Research's 2003 Geoclutter effort to study shallow-water bottom reverberation and clutter in the STRATAFORM area off New Jersey. Sources were bistatic coherent pulses. The receiver was the five-octave research array (FORA). The STRATAFORM has benign surface morphology but strong clutter is observed. Some highlights of the reverberant returns from that area are discussed that include returns from probable fish schools. From these two data sets, it is shown that up to 15-20-dB left/right discrimination is attainable on broadside cardioid beams in the 1200-1750-Hz region for both linear frequency modulation (LFM) pulses and sound-underwater-source (SUS) broadband data. Also, a (previously developed) constrained simulated annealing (SA) inversion technique is applied to the directional reverberation data from the NURC array. A two-layer fluid model of the bottom is assumed. The algorithm is best at estimating compressional speeds, layer thickness, and attenuations in that order. Extracted bottom parameters at the site are compared with independent inversion results previously reported by Holland. Inverting reverberation from directional arrays is shown to give somewhat better quality results since, unlike standard line arrays, the reverberation data apply to only one bearing along the seafloor.

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