Abstract

Array gain (AG) is significant in evaluating the detection performance of the vertical line array, which is directly determined by the correlation of signal and noise, respectively. In this paper, we analyze the vertical correlation for a 16-element vertical line array experimented in the deep ocean in 2016. The ray interference theory is utilized to interpret the mechanism of the vertical correlation of the sound field in different zones. In the direct-arrival zone, the direct rays and once-surface-reflected rays are two dominated components, whose arrival time difference for each element are nearly the same, and the vertical correlation is high. In the shadow zone, the sound field is mainly dominated by bottom-reflected rays and the vertical correlation decreases due to different grazing angles and arrival times of each ray. Different from the previous assumption of noise independence, the effect of noise correlation on the AG is analyzed through the measured marine environmental noise. Results indicate that the noise correlation coefficients in two zones are low but not 0. In the direct-arrival zone, AG is about 10 dB, very close to the ideal value of 10 log M . AG even exceeds it when NG is negative. Moreover, AG in the direct-arrival zone is higher than the one in the shadow zone.

Highlights

  • Array gain (AG) is a crucial factor for the detection sensor system, which describes the improvement of the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) between the sensor array and the single element

  • An experiment was conducted in the shadow water, and conclusion reveals that vertical correlation depends on the horizontal range rather than element depth when the received signal at low frequency is in the iso-velocity shallow water with a silt-sand bottom [4]

  • Supposing that there is a vertical line array composed of M elements and the sound source is deployed in the far-field, the output of the gth element is expressed as follows according to the plane wave theory

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Summary

Introduction

The vertical hydrophone line array was composed of 16 elements with an interval of. The top element was deployed at a depth of 370 m, and the bottom element was about 445 m

Conventional Beamforming Technology
Vertical Correlation Coefficient
Signal Gain and Noise Gain
Simulation Calculation
It can be seen that AG
A The and depth
Correlation
16. Average
Correlation and Array Gain in the Shadow Zone
17. Received
20. Variation
25. The noise at point
Conclusions
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