Basin Acoustics in the Arctic Ocean

Basin Acoustics in the Arctic Ocean
Author: Ira Dyer
Publisher:
Total Pages: 10
Release: 1988
Genre:
ISBN:

The FRAM program experiments were located in the Pole and Nansen Abyssal Plains of the eastern Arctic Ocean. During the four years span (1979-1982), extensive experiments in physical oceanography, ocean acoustics and marine geophysics were conducted from a series of drifting, manned ice stations by scientists from the U.S., Canada and Norway. Physical oceanography measurements included C/STD profiles and transects, water sampling and current meter profiles. The acoustics of long range, low frequency propagation with both explosive and coherent sources, transoceanic basin backscattering, ambient noise and its ice generation mechanisms were studied. In the geophysical experiments seismic reflection and refraction, bathymetric soundings, heat flow, gravity and coring were done. This paper gives an overview of the technology used for the FRAM science program and representative results of some of the investigations. (EDC).

Acoustic Backscattering from the Basin and Margins of the Arctic Ocean

Acoustic Backscattering from the Basin and Margins of the Arctic Ocean
Author: I. Dyer
Publisher:
Total Pages: 12
Release: 1982
Genre:
ISBN:

Sound waves created by high-energy explosives were used to measure reverberation and backscattering in the Arctic Ocean. From an ice camp in the Beaufort Sea, signals were backscattered from the continental margin and other major features of the basin. An acoustic array was used to analyze the signals in azimuth. Based on these data we constructed charts of normalized backscatter level, which can be compared with known topography of the Arctic Ocean. Resolution of this remote sensing technique for our experimental conditions (analysis frequency, 9 Hz; averaging time, 20 s; array size, 600 x 600 m) is about 8 deg in azimuth, 15 km in radial extent, and 1 km in depth. We obtained interpretable signals out to 2700 km. For 1000 km or less, the backscatter charts provide continuous coverage of the margins and major submerged features. Strong returns from about 73.2 deg N, 139.0 deg W indicate one or more prominent features that many contemporary topographic charts do not show, but which we believe to be real. Other strong returns are evident from the Northwind Escarpment and from the continental slopes of Alaska and the Canadian Archipelago. Via a backscatter model, we estimate the roughness product (rms height times correlation radius) of these features to be about 4500 sq m on average. Reprints (EDC).

Sound Images of the Ocean

Sound Images of the Ocean
Author: Peter Wille
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 504
Release: 2005-12-06
Genre: Science
ISBN: 3540279105

Sound Images of the Ocean is the first comprehensive overview of acoustic imaging applications in the various fields of marine research, utilization, surveillance, and protection. The book employs 400 sound images of the sea floor and of processes in the sea volume, contributed by more than 120 marine experts from 22 nations.

Geologic Structures of the Arctic Basin

Geologic Structures of the Arctic Basin
Author: Alexey Piskarev
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 380
Release: 2018-06-11
Genre: Science
ISBN: 3319777424

This book contains the most complete description of the geologic and geophysical data of the structure of Arctic Basin including structures of the earth’s crust, crustal and acoustic basement, and sedimentary cover. The book includes information about extracted and studied cores and samples; observed, processed and interpreted data on geophysical anomalies and different conceptions, and a hypotheses of the origin of the modern Arctic Basin structures. Progress in solving the problems of the Arctic Basin geology is presented in the chapters and include contributions from leading field experts.

Ocean Seismo-Acoustics

Ocean Seismo-Acoustics
Author: T. Akal
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 898
Release: 2013-03-09
Genre: Science
ISBN: 1461322014

Seafloor investigation has long been a feature of not only seismology but also of acoustics. Indeed it was acoustics that produced depth sounders, giving us the first capability of producing both global and local maps of the seafloor. Subsequently, better instrumentation and techniques led to a clearer, more quantitative picture of the seabed itself, which stimulated new hypotheses such as seafloor spreading through the availability of more reliable data on sediment thickness over ocean basins and other bottom features. Geologists and geophysicists have used both acoustic and seismic methods to study the seabed by considering the propagation of signals arising from both natural seismic events and man-made impulsive sources. Although significant advances have been made in instrumentation, such as long towed geophysical arrays, ai r guns and ocean bot tom seismometers, the pic ture of the seafloor is still far from complete. Underwater acoustics concerns itself today with the phenomena of propagation and noise at frequencies and ranges that require an understanding of acoustic interaction at both of its boundaries, the sea surface and seafloor, over depths ranging from tens to thousands of meters. Much of the earlier higher frequency (>1 kHz) work included the characterization of the seafloor in regimes of reflection coefficients which were empirically derived from surveys. The results of these studies met with only limited success, confined as they were to those areas where survey data existed and lacking a physical understanding of the processes of reflection and scattering.

Interannual Variability of the Atlantic Water in the Arctic Basin

Interannual Variability of the Atlantic Water in the Arctic Basin
Author: S. V. Pisarev
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1996
Genre:
ISBN:

This report consists of two independent parts. The first part addresses the interannual variability in the Arctic Ocean. The analysis of long-term variations in the water temperature and salinity from the beginning of the 20th century until present, has been conducted with the use of all available data of CTD measurements in different regions of the Arctic Basin, and up-to-date climatology data which represents the mean hydrologic fields. The second part of this report considers the results of processing and analysis of the signals transmitted during the Transarctic Acoustic Propagation experiment from the ice camp TURPAN and received at the ice camp NARWHAL. The main goal of this study is to determine the propagation loss of individual acoustic modes in the signals transmitted across the Arctic Basin to the Lincoln Sea.

Arctic/North Pacific Ocean Environmental Studies

Arctic/North Pacific Ocean Environmental Studies
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1997
Genre:
ISBN:

The project began in 1993 as a effort to design and construct an Arctic capable low frequency acoustic source at 20 Hertz with acoustic power of 195-200 dB. The objective of the effort was to test the feasibility of acoustic monitoring of the Arctic Ocean and ice cap using long range low frequency acoustic propagation, by answering the fundamental questions: (1) What source level would be required to reliably propagate at 20 Hertz across the Arctic Basin?, (2) Will the Arctic acoustic channel be stable enough to permit precise phase and/or travel time measurements?, and (3) Will modes/rays be stable, identifiable and predictable? The design study of Arctic capable acoustic sources was completed in December 1993 and a decision was made to go forward with the manufacture of an acoustic source by the Institute of Applied Physics, Nizhny Novgorod, Russia. The results of the design study by the Institute of Applied Physics are included in this report. It was also decided to support a experiment in the Arctic in April 1994 to be known as the Transarctic Acoustic Propagation (TAP) Experiment. The objectives of the experiment would be to test the acoustic source and the hypotheses of acoustic monitoring of the Arctic Ocean.