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  • 1
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    American Institute of Physics for the Acoustical Society of America
    In:  Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 100 (2) . pp. 797-813.
    Publication Date: 2018-04-13
    Description: The recently introduced notion of peak arrivals [Athanassoulis and Skarsoulis, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 97, 3575–3588 (1995)], defined as the significant local maxima of the arrival pattern, is studied here as a modeling basis for performing ocean tomography. Peak arrivals constitute direct theoretical counterparts of experimentally observed peaks, and offer a complete modeling of experimental observables, even in cases where ray or modal arrivals cannot be resolved. The coefficients of the resulting peak‐inversion system, relating travel‐time with sound‐speed perturbations, are explicitly calculated in the case of range‐independent environments using normal‐mode theory. To apply the peak‐inversion scheme to tomography the peak identification and tracking problem is examined from a statistical viewpoint; maximum‐likelihood and least‐square solutions are derived and discussed. The particular approach adopted treats the identification and tracking problem in close relation to the inversion procedure; all possibilities of associating observed peaks with background arrivals are examined via trial inversions, and the best peak identification is selected with respect to a least‐square criterion. The feasibility of peak tomography is subsequently demonstrated using first synthetic data and then measured data from the THETIS‐I experiment. In the synthetic case the performance of the overall scheme is found to be satisfactory both with noise‐free and noisy data. Furthermore, the identification, tracking, and inversion results using experimental acoustic data from THETIS‐I are in good agreement with independent field observations.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
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    American Institute of Physics for the Acoustical Society of America
    In:  Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 116 (2). pp. 790-798.
    Publication Date: 2018-04-13
    Description: Ocean acoustic tomography is used to obtain heat-content estimates for the western Mediterranean basin. Travel-time data from 13 tomography sections of the Thetis-2 experiment (January–October 1994) are analyzed with a matched-peak inversion approach. The underlying analysis involves the use of peak arrivals and nonlinear model relations between travel-time and sound-speed variations. Slice inversion results are combined with temperature covariance functions for the western Mediterranean to obtain heat-content estimates for the basin. These estimates compare favorably with ECMWF data over the nine-month period of the Thetis-2 experiment. Furthermore, estimates for the basin-average temperature of the western Mediterranean deep water are obtained. © 2004 Acoustical Society of America.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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