Wave Propagation and Source Localization in Random and Refracting Media
Geroski, David
2021
Abstract
This thesis focuses on understanding the way that acoustic and electromagnetic waves propagate through an inhomogeneous or turbulent environment, and analyzes the effect that this uncertainty has on signal processing algorithms. These methods are applied to determining the effectiveness of matched-field style source localization algorithms in uncertain ocean environments, and to analyzing the effect that random media composed of electrically large scatterers has on propagating waves. The first half of this dissertation introduces the frequency-difference autoproduct, a surrogate field quantity, and applies this quantity to passive acoustic remote sensing in waveguiding ocean environments. The frequency-difference autoproduct, a quadratic product of frequency-domain complex measured field values, is demonstrated to retain phase stability in the face of significant environmental uncertainty even when the related pressure field’s phase is as unstable as noise. This result demonstrates that a measured autoproduct (at difference frequencies less than 5 Hz) that is associated with a pressure field (measured in the hundreds of Hz) and which has propagated hundreds of kilometers in a deep ocean sound channel can be consistently cross-correlated with a calculated autoproduct. This cross-correlation is shown to give a cross-correlation coefficient that is more than 10 dB greater than the equivalent cross-correlation coefficient of the measured pressure field, demonstrating that the autoproduct is a stable alternative to the pressure field for array signal processing algorithms. The next major result demonstrates that the frequency-difference autoproduct can be used to passively localize remote unknown sound sources that broadcast sound hundreds of kilometers to a measuring device at hundreds of Hz frequencies. Because of the high frequency content of the measured pressure field, an equivalent conventional localization result is not possible using frequency-domain methods. These two primary contributions, recovery of frequency-domain phase stability and robust source localization, represent unique contributions to existing signal processing techniques. The second half of this thesis focuses on understanding electromagnetic wave propagation in a random medium composed of metallic scatterers placed within a background medium. This thesis focuses on developing new methods to compute the extinction and phase matrices, quantities related to Radiative Transfer theory, of a random medium composed of electrically large, interacting scatterers. A new method is proposed, based on using Monte Carlo simulation and full-wave computational electromagnetics methods simultaneously, to calculate the extinction coefficient and phase function of such a random medium. Another major result of this thesis demonstrates that the coherent portion of the field scattered by a configuration of the random medium is equivalent to the field scattered by a homogeneous dielectric that occupies the same volume as the configuration. This thesis also demonstrates that the incoherent portion of the field scattered by a configuration of the random medium, related to the phase function of the medium, can be calculated using buffer zone averaging. These methods are applied to model field propagation in a random medium, and propose an extension of single scattering theory that can be used to understand mean field propagation in relatively dense (tens of particles per cubic wavelength) random media composed of electrically large (up to 3 wavelengths long) conductors and incoherent field propagation in relatively dense (up to 5 particles per cubic wavelength) media composed of electrically large (up to two wavelengths) conductors. These results represent an important contribution to the field of incoherent, polarimetric remote sensing of the environment.Deep Blue DOI
Subjects
Remote Sensing Frequency-Differencing Random Media Propagation
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Thesis
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