Colosi, John A.,

Sound propagation through the stochastic ocean / John A. Colosi, Naval Postgraduate School. - New York : Cambridge University Press, 2016. - 1 online resource (xxi, 420 pages) : digital, PDF file(s).

Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 06 Jun 2016).

The ocean is opaque to electromagnetic radiation and transparent to low frequency sound, so acoustical methodologies are an important tool for sensing the undersea world. Stochastic sound-speed fluctuations in the ocean, such as those caused by internal waves, result in a progressive randomisation of acoustic signals as they traverse the ocean environment. This signal randomisation imposes a limit to the effectiveness of ocean acoustic remote sensing, navigation and communication. Sound Propagation through the Stochastic Ocean provides a comprehensive treatment of developments in the field of statistical ocean acoustics over the last 35 years. This will be of fundamental interest to oceanographers, marine biologists, geophysicists, engineers, applied mathematicians, and physicists. Key discoveries in topics such as internal waves, ray chaos, Feynman path integrals, and mode transport theory are addressed with illustrations from ocean observations. The topics are presented at an approachable level for advanced students and seasoned researchers alike.

9781139680417 (ebook)


Underwater acoustics.
Sound--Transmission.
Oceanography.

QC242.2 / .C646 2016

620.2/5