Abstract

On the basis of the experimental data on the sound field formation in the Norwegian Sea, the year-to-year variability of the propagation conditions is estimated. A comparative analysis is performed for the data obtained from two long-range-propagation experiments with explosion-generated signals. The experiments were carried out in summertime (August) on a path crossing the central deep-water part of the Norwegian Sea and were separated in time by a period of four years. Noticeable changes are found to occur in the sound speed fields between the two experiments. These changes are related to a change in the distance between the cores of cold waters (observed in the region of the Norwegian Basin) and warm waters (observed in the region of the Lofoten Basin). According to calculations, the observed changes in the sound speed structure can lead to considerable changes in the propagation anomaly and in the range dependence of the sound field decay. In spite of the noticeable difference in the propagation conditions, the experimental coefficients of low-frequency attenuation differ little for the two experiments.

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