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On the Possibility of using Vertical Receiving Arrays for Underwater Acoustic Communication on the Arctic Shelf

On the Possibility of using Vertical Receiving Arrays for Underwater Acoustic Communication on... Abstract Numerical simulation is applied to analyze the possibilities of using vertical receiving arrays covering the entire waveguide for underwater acoustic communication on the shallow Arctic shelf. Binary phase shift keying with a carrier frequency of 750 Hz is selected for data transfer. It is shown that an algorithm for selecting acoustic signals corresponding to the first waveguide mode or an algorithm based on using passive-phase conjugation eliminates intersymbol interference. In case of spatial signal processing and waveguide depth of 30 m the error-free information transmission is possible when the signal-to-noise ratio is ≈15 dB less than that for a single receiver. It has been demonstrated these advantages to be present in different conditions on the Arctic shelf: with an acoustically soft or acoustically hard bottom, with surface waves, or with ice cover. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Acoustical Physics Springer Journals

On the Possibility of using Vertical Receiving Arrays for Underwater Acoustic Communication on the Arctic Shelf

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References (22)

Publisher
Springer Journals
Copyright
2019 Pleiades Publishing, Ltd.
ISSN
1063-7710
eISSN
1562-6865
DOI
10.1134/s1063771019030096
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Abstract Numerical simulation is applied to analyze the possibilities of using vertical receiving arrays covering the entire waveguide for underwater acoustic communication on the shallow Arctic shelf. Binary phase shift keying with a carrier frequency of 750 Hz is selected for data transfer. It is shown that an algorithm for selecting acoustic signals corresponding to the first waveguide mode or an algorithm based on using passive-phase conjugation eliminates intersymbol interference. In case of spatial signal processing and waveguide depth of 30 m the error-free information transmission is possible when the signal-to-noise ratio is ≈15 dB less than that for a single receiver. It has been demonstrated these advantages to be present in different conditions on the Arctic shelf: with an acoustically soft or acoustically hard bottom, with surface waves, or with ice cover.

Journal

Acoustical PhysicsSpringer Journals

Published: May 1, 2019

Keywords: Acoustics

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