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Beamforming on seismic interface waves with an array of geophones on the shallow sea floor

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8 Author(s)
Tencate, J.A. ; Div. of Earth & Environ. Sci., Los Alamos Nat. Lab., NM ; Muir, T.G. ; Caiti, A. ; Kristensen, A.
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The problem of locating very low frequency sound sources in shallow water is made difficult by the interaction of propagating acoustic waves with the sea floor. Slow wave speeds and the attendant short wavelengths suggest that low frequency beamforming and source localization with sea floor geophones can be accomplished with relatively small arrays when compared with hydrophone arrays in the water column. To test the feasibility of this approach, experiments were carried out in the shallow water of the Malta Channel of the Straits of Sicily where the Scholte wave speed was some 10 to 20 times slower that the speed of sound in water. A linear array of ten vertically gimballed geophones was deployed and measurements were made on propagating seismic wave fields generated by explosive shots. The resulting directivities, beam patterns, and sidelobe characteristics are in excellent agreement with array theory, which suggests that coherent processing is a viable technique on which to base new applications for seismic arrays on the sea floor. Supporting materials on the geophysics of Scholte waves and calculations of the wave field at the site are presented

Published in:
Oceanic Engineering, IEEE Journal of  (Volume:20 ,  Issue: 4 )

Date of Publication: Oct 1995

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