Artigo Revisado por pares

Spatial field shifts in ocean acoustic environmental sensitivity analysis

2007; Acoustical Society of America; Volume: 122; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1121/1.2783123

ISSN

1520-9024

Autores

Stan E. Dosso, Michael G. Morley, Peter M. Giles, Gary H. Brooke, Diana F. McCammon, Sean Pecknold, Paul C. Hines,

Tópico(s)

Underwater Vehicles and Communication Systems

Resumo

This article examines the effects of spatial field shifts in ocean acoustic environmental sensitivity analysis. Acoustic sensitivity studies are typically based on comparing acoustic fields computed for a reference environmental model and for a perturbed model in which one or more parameters have been changed. The perturbation to the acoustic field due to the perturbed environment generally includes a component representing a spatial shift of the field (i.e., local field structure remains coherent, but shifts in range and/or depth) and a component representing a change to the shifted field. Standard sensitivity measures based on acoustic perturbations at a fixed point can indicate high sensitivity in cases where the field structure changes very little, but is simply shifted by a small spatial offset; this can conflict with an intuitive understanding of sensitivity. This article defines and compares fixed-point and field-shift corrected sensitivity measures. The approaches are illustrated with examples of deterministic sensitivity (i.e., sensitivity to a specific environmental change) and stochastic sensitivity (sensitivity to environmental uncertainty) in range-independent and range-dependent environments.

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