4.6 Article

Effect of Subsurface Mediterranean Water Eddies on Sound Propagation Using ROMS Output and the Bellhop Model

Journal

WATER
Volume 13, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w13243617

Keywords

Mediterranean Water eddies; sound propagation; ROMS model; Bellhop model

Funding

  1. UBO
  2. ISblue project, Interdisciplinary graduate school for the blue planet [ANR-17-EURE-0015]
  3. French government under the program Investissements d'Avenir
  4. Iran's Ministry of Science and Research, University of Hormozgan

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The study reveals that Mediterranean Water eddies have a significant impact on the propagation of sound signals, creating sound channels for signals to travel with large acoustic energy, while signals outside these channels are deflected.
Ocean processes can locally modify the upper ocean density structure, leading to an attenuation or a deflection of sound signals. Among these phenomena, eddies cause significant changes in acoustic properties of the ocean; this suggests a possible characterization of eddies via acoustics. Here, we investigate the propagation of sound signals in the Northeastern Atlantic Ocean in the presence of eddies of Mediterranean Water (Meddies). Relying on a high-resolution simulation of the Atlantic Ocean in which Meddies were identified and using the Bellhop acoustic model, we investigated the differences in sound propagation in the presence and absence of Meddies. Meddies create sound channels in which the signals travel with large acoustic energy. The transmission loss decreases to 80 or 90 dB; more signals reach the synthetic receivers. Outside of these channels, the sound signals are deflected from their normal paths. Using receivers at different locations, the acoustic impact of different Meddies, or of the same Meddy at different stages of its life, are characterized in terms of angular distributions of times of arrivals and of energy at reception. Determining the influence of Meddies on acoustic wave characteristics at reception is the first step to inverting the acoustic signals received and retrieving the Meddy hydrological characteristics.

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