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Journal ArticleDOI

Measurement and interpretation of the impulse response for backscattering by a thin spherical shell using a broad‐bandwidth source that is nearly acoustically transparent

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TLDR
In this paper, an empty stainless-steel spherical shell was used for backscattering from a PVDF sheet with water in contact with both sides, and the shell's calculated impulse response was observed over a wide frequency interval.
Abstract
A novel source was developed to produce a plane‐wave unipolar pressure impulse with a wide range of frequency components. The source consisted of a PVDF sheet with water in contact with both sides. The PVDF was driven by a step voltage. This source is nearly acoustically transparent and was used for backscattering from an empty stainless‐steel spherical shell. The shell was placed in the near field of the source where it experienced a plane‐wave pressure impulse followed much later by edge contributions resulting from the finite source size. A hydrophone was placed in the far field of the scatterer on the opposite side of the source. Prominent features in the shell’s calculated impulse response are observed over a wide frequency interval. Time records reveal an approximately Gaussian wave packet from the excitation of the subsonic a0− wave associated with the backscattering enhancement near the coincidence frequency (≊309 kHz). Superposed on the same records are large contributions from the low‐frequency excitation of the a0− wave and from the s0 wave. A bipolar feature of the initial response was found to be associated with the finite inertia of the shell and the null frequency. An approximate theory predicts that the associated relaxation time depends on the mass per area of the shell and the density and sound speed of the surrounding water. The shell used in the experiment has a thickness to radius ratio of 2.3% and the scattering phenomena of interest occur between 8 and 450 kHz corresponding to ka from approximately 1 to 70. The 10‐kHz ringing of the target associated with the a0− wave is quite pronounced.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Sound scattering by several zooplankton groups. II. Scattering models

TL;DR: Mathematical scattering models are derived and compared with data from zooplankton from several gross anatomical groups--fluidlike, elastic shelled, and gas bearing, and reasonable qualitative agreement and reasonable quantitative agreement are found between the predictions and variability and averages of echo data.
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Sound scattering by several zooplankton groups. L. Experimental determination of dominant scattering mechanisms

TL;DR: Stanton et al. as discussed by the authors investigated the acoustic scattering properties of live individual zooplankton from several gross anatomical groups and found that the material type of each group strongly affects both the overall echo level and pattern of the target strength versus frequency plots.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sound scattering by several zooplankton groups. I. Experimental determination of dominant scattering mechanisms

TL;DR: The results of this first paper show that the euphausiids behave as weakly scattering fluid bodies and there are major contributions from at least two parts of the body to the echo, and the gastropods produce echoes from the front interface and possibly from a slow-traveling circumferential (Lamb) wave.
Journal ArticleDOI

High-frequency backscattering enhancements by thick finite cylindrical shells in water at oblique incidence: Experiments, interpretation, and calculations

TL;DR: In this article, a broadband PVDF (polyvinylidene fluoride) sheet source is used to obtain the backscattering spectral magnitude as a function of the tilt angle (measured from broadside incidence) of the cylinder.
Journal ArticleDOI

Calibration of broadband active acoustic systems using a single standard spherical target

TL;DR: In this article, a new method is developed in which a single standard target is used to calibrate the system response of broadband monostatic active acoustic systems, which completely eliminates the source of the resonances through pulse-compression processing of the signal.
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