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Depth-Dependent Geoacoustic Inferences With Dispersion at the New England Mud Patch via Reflection Coefficient Inversion
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Citations
47
References
2019
Year
Depth-dependent Geoacoustic InferencesEngineeringSeismic WaveAcoustical OceanographyUnderwater AcousticEarth ScienceGeophysicsOcean AcousticsGeographyVelocity ProfileInverse ProblemsSedimentologySediment TransportCoastal Sediment TransportSeismologyDepth-dependent Geoacoustic PropertiesSeismic Reflection ProfilingCivil EngineeringReflection Coefficient InversionGeoacoustic Properties
Depth-dependent geoacoustic properties are inferred from wide-angle frequency-domain reflection-coefficient data at two sites with different mud-layer thicknesses on the New England Mud Patch. A trans-dimensional Bayesian inversion is employed to estimate geoacoustic properties and uncertainties from these data using the viscous grain shearing sediment model and spherical wave reflection-coefficient predictions. Results near the thick-mud (SWAMI) site show a nearly uniform sound velocity over the upper approximately 9.2m, followed by a transition layer with velocity increasing nonlinearly by ~280 m/s over 1.8 m. At the thin-sediment (VC31-2) site, the velocity profile exhibits a similar transition layer. Estimates of intrinsic velocity and attenuation dispersion are also obtained. Over the measurement band of about 400-1300 Hz, the velocity in the fine-grained sediments (mud) at both sites varies by only a few meters per second, i.e., velocity is nearly independent of frequency. The attenuation of the fine-grained sediments at both sites follows a nearly linear frequency dependence. The geoacoustic inferences compare reasonably closely with independent measurements including core measurements, chirp-reflection data, and angle of intromission data.
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