Performance study of ray-based ocean acoustic tomography methods for estimating submesoscale variability in the upper ocean

Author:

Ollivier Etienne1,Touret Richard X.2,McKinley Matthew1,Jin Jihui3,Bracco Annalisa2,Sabra Karim G.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology 1 , Atlanta, Georgia 30332, USA

2. School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences and Program in Ocean Science and Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology 2 , Atlanta, Georgia 30332, USA

3. Electrical and Computer Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology 3 , Atlanta, Georgia 30332, USA

Abstract

Ocean acoustic tomography (OAT) methods aim at estimating variations of sound speed profiles (SSP) based on acoustic measurements between multiple source-receiver pairs (e.g., eigenray travel times). This study investigates the estimation of range-dependent SSPs in the upper ocean over short ranges (<5 km) using the classical ray-based OAT formulation as well as iterative or adaptive OAT formulations (i.e., when the sources and receivers configuration can evolve across successive iterations of this inverse problem). A regional ocean circulation model for the DeSoto Canyon in the Gulf of Mexico is used to simulate three-dimensional sound speed variations spanning a month-long period, which exhibits significant submesoscale variability of variable intensity. OAT performance is investigated in this simulated environment in terms of (1) the selected source-receivers configuration and effective ray coverage, (2) the selected OAT estimator formulations, linearized forward model accuracy, and the parameterization of the expected SSP variability in terms of empirical orthogonal functions, and (3) the duration over which the OAT inversion is performed. Practical implications for the design of future OAT experiments for monitoring submesoscale variability in the upper ocean with moving autonomous platforms are discussed.

Funder

Office of Naval Research

Publisher

Acoustical Society of America (ASA)

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