Measurements of high-frequency acoustic scattering from glacially eroded rock outcrops.

Academic Article

Abstract

  • Measurements of acoustic backscattering from glacially eroded rock outcrops were made off the coast of Sandefjord, Norway using a high-frequency synthetic aperture sonar (SAS) system. A method by which scattering strength can be estimated from data collected by a SAS system is detailed, as well as a method to estimate an effective calibration parameter for the system. Scattering strength measurements from very smooth areas of the rock outcrops agree with predictions from both the small-slope approximation and perturbation theory, and range between -33 and -26 dB at 20° grazing angle. Scattering strength measurements from very rough areas of the rock outcrops agree with the sine-squared shape of the empirical Lambertian model and fall between -30 and -20 dB at 20° grazing angle. Both perturbation theory and the small-slope approximation are expected to be inaccurate for the very rough area, and overestimate scattering strength by 8 dB or more for all measurements of very rough surfaces. Supporting characterization of the environment was performed in the form of geoacoustic and roughness parameter estimates.
  • Authors

  • Olson, Derek R
  • Lyons, Anthony
  • Sæbø, Torstein O
  • Status

    Publication Date

  • April 2016
  • Has Subject Area

    Digital Object Identifier (doi)

    Pubmed Id

  • 27106331
  • Start Page

  • 1833
  • Volume

  • 139
  • Issue

  • 4