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J Acoust Soc Am. 2014 Dec;136(6):2976. doi: 10.1121/1.4898418.

Measurements of ocean bottom low-angle backscattering by single-mode reverberation.

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America

J Zeng, W Y Zhao, D Y Peng, H F Li, T F Gao, E C Shang

Affiliations

  1. Key Laboratory of Underwater Environment, Institute of Acoustics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, No. 21 Bei Si Huan Xi Lu, Beijing 100190, China.

PMID: 25480047 DOI: 10.1121/1.4898418

Abstract

The characteristics of scattering due to interface roughness are usually described by the backscattering matrix for reverberation modeling. The backscattering matrix based on the Bass perturbation theory has significant differences from that based on the empirical scattering rule (Lambert's rule), especially at low grazing angles. In a waveguide environment with a point source, it is very difficult to extract the quantitative characteristics of the backscattering matrix at low grazing angles from the experimental data because of the difficulties in acquiring low-grazing-angle scattering data and separating the scattering data between different modes (grazing angles). In contrast, the use of single-mode excitations as sources in shallow-water waveguides enables acquisition of good quality low-grazing-angle scattering data. In this paper, the characteristics of the backscattering matrix were obtained from different single-mode reverberation experiments in shallow-water. The experiments were carried out at different sites during different seasons off the coasts of China. Model-data comparisons were made and the results showed that at low grazing angles (2°-5°), the backscattering matrices based on the Bass perturbation theory were in good agreement with the experimental data, but the backscattering matrices based on Lambert's rule were not.

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