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Electrical and Computer Engineering
Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Publications and Presentations
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Full-Text Articles in Engineering
Source Localization In A Time-Varying Ocean Waveguide, Cristiano Soares, Martin Siderius, Sérgio M. Jesus
Source Localization In A Time-Varying Ocean Waveguide, Cristiano Soares, Martin Siderius, Sérgio M. Jesus
Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Publications and Presentations
One of the most stringent impairments in matched-field processing is the impact of missing or erroneous environmental information on the final source location estimate. This problem is known in the literature as model mismatch and is strongly frequency dependent. Another unavoidable factor that contributes to model mismatch is the natural time and spatial variability of the ocean waveguide. As a consequence, most of the experimental results obtained to date focus on short source-receiver ranges (usually <5 >km), stationary sources, reduced time windows and frequencies generally below 600 Hz. This paper shows that MFP source localization can be made robust to time–space …5>
Range-Dependent Seabed Characterization By Inversion Of Acoustic Data From A Towed Receiver Array, Martin Siderius, Peter L. Nielsen, Peter Gerstoft
Range-Dependent Seabed Characterization By Inversion Of Acoustic Data From A Towed Receiver Array, Martin Siderius, Peter L. Nielsen, Peter Gerstoft
Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Publications and Presentations
The MAPEX2000 experiments were conducted in the Mediterranean Sea in March, 2000 to determine seabed properties using a towed acoustic source and receiver array. Towed systems are advantageous because they are easy to deploy from a ship and the moving platform offers the possibility for estimating spatially variable (range-dependent) seabed properties. In this paper, seabed parameters are determined using a matched-field geoacoustic inversion approach with measured, towed array data. Previous research has successfully applied matched-field geoacoustic inversion techniques to measured acoustic data. However, in nearly all cases the inverted data were collected on moored, vertical receiver arrays. Results here show …