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Hybrid normal mode and energy flux model for an ideal oceanic wedge environment with radial sound speed front

Energy flux is an acoustic propagation model that calculates the locally-averaged intensity without computing explicit eigenvalues or tracing rays. The energy flux method has so far only been used for two-dimensional problems that have collapsed the third dimension by rotational or translational sym...

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Published in:arXiv.org 2022-04
Main Authors: Langhirt, Mark, Holland, Charles, Martinelli, Sheri, Ying-Tsong, Lin, Brown, Dan
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Holland, Charles
Martinelli, Sheri
Ying-Tsong, Lin
Brown, Dan
description Energy flux is an acoustic propagation model that calculates the locally-averaged intensity without computing explicit eigenvalues or tracing rays. The energy flux method has so far only been used for two-dimensional problems that have collapsed the third dimension by rotational or translational symmetry. This report outlines the derivation and implementation of a three-dimensional ocean acoustic propagation model using a combination of normal modes and the energy flux method. This model is specifically derived for a wedge environment with a radial sound speed front at some distance from the shoreline. The hybrid energy flux model's output is compared to that of another propagation model for this environment that is built on normal modes alone. General agreement in the shape, location, and amplitude of caustic features is observed with some discrepancies that may be attributable to inherent differences in the model derivations. This work serves as a stepping-stone toward developing a more generalized three-dimensional energy flux model.
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subjects Acoustic propagation
Eigenvalues
Energy
Propagation
Sound
Sound propagation
Three dimensional models
Tides
Underwater acoustics
title Hybrid normal mode and energy flux model for an ideal oceanic wedge environment with radial sound speed front
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