Sv. Burenkov et al., HEARD ISLAND FEASIBILITY TEST - LONG-RANGE SOUND-TRANSMISSION FROM HEARD ISLAND TO KRYLOV UNDERWATER MOUNTAIN, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 96(4), 1994, pp. 2458-2463
The Russian research vessel AKADEMIK NIKOLAI ANDREYEV participated in
the HIFT experiment while anchored above the Krylov Seamount (17.5 deg
rees N, 30 degrees W). The propagation path length from Heard Island t
o Krylov was 12.5 Mm, and was located just between the Ascension stati
on (9 Mm) and the more distant American and Canadian stations (16 to 1
7 Mm). All 35 successful transmissions were received by two omnidirect
ional hydrophones and a 30-m-long array. Receptions were sampled at 22
8 Hz and processed in both time and frequency domains. The main result
of the processing was quite unexpected: the signal exhibited strong a
mplitude variability (fading as deep as 20 dB in less than 5 min) and
simultaneously exhibited an incredible phase stability. All the phase
variance up to the accuracy of positioning was due to the mutual motio
n of the transmit and receive ships. The minimal propagation loss for
cw transmissions was 120 dB. M-sequence processing indicated an 18- to
20-s arrival spread estimate. However, the arrivals were very unstabl
e with a lifetime of about 5 min.