Remote prediction of gassy marine sediment properties is important for geohazard assessment. Gas bubble resonance theory suggests that gassy sediments exhibit acoustic wave velocity-frequency and attenuation-frequency relationships that depend on gas bubble size, gas content, and sediment elastic properties. An acoustic monitoring experiment to investigate gas bubble resonance effects was undertaken at an intertidal site at Dibden Bay, Southampton, United Kingdom. A vertical hydrophone array was positioned to straddle the top of the gassy zone identified on acoustic reflection profiles at about 1 m below the seabed. A miniboomer in the seabed above the array was used to generate broadband (600 Hz to 3000 Hz) acoustic signals every 10 min du...
A model for the high-frequency backscatter angular response of gassy sediments is proposed. For the ...
Acoustic data from two long cores, comprising marine clays and silts taken from Emerald Basin off No...
Models of acoustic backscatter typically take into account two different processes: interface scatte...
Acoustic turbidity caused by the presence of gas bubbles in seafloor sediments is a common occurrenc...
Bubbles of atmospheric gas can be entrained by breaking waves at the top of the water column: this b...
Bubbles can dramatically change the acoustic properties of their host medium even if they are presen...
The presence of bubbles of biogenic gas in marine sediments has a dramatic effect on the acoustical ...
Geoacoustic inversion requires a generic knowledge of the frequency-dependence of compressional wave...
From a geohazard assessment perspective, the distribution, content and dynamics of free gas in surfi...
Methane release from seafloor reservoirs is thought to have caused paleo-climate warming and have t...
In situ techniques provide the most reliable method of examining the geoacoustical properties of mar...
The likelihood of leakage from sub-seabed Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) sites has been debated si...
A model for nonlinear gas bubble pulsation in marine sediments is presented. This model is then line...
More than three decades ago, Anderson and Hampton [1, 2] (A&H) presented theories for wave propa...
Underwater bubbles are prevalent in the marine environment, from natural sources such as breaking wa...
A model for the high-frequency backscatter angular response of gassy sediments is proposed. For the ...
Acoustic data from two long cores, comprising marine clays and silts taken from Emerald Basin off No...
Models of acoustic backscatter typically take into account two different processes: interface scatte...
Acoustic turbidity caused by the presence of gas bubbles in seafloor sediments is a common occurrenc...
Bubbles of atmospheric gas can be entrained by breaking waves at the top of the water column: this b...
Bubbles can dramatically change the acoustic properties of their host medium even if they are presen...
The presence of bubbles of biogenic gas in marine sediments has a dramatic effect on the acoustical ...
Geoacoustic inversion requires a generic knowledge of the frequency-dependence of compressional wave...
From a geohazard assessment perspective, the distribution, content and dynamics of free gas in surfi...
Methane release from seafloor reservoirs is thought to have caused paleo-climate warming and have t...
In situ techniques provide the most reliable method of examining the geoacoustical properties of mar...
The likelihood of leakage from sub-seabed Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) sites has been debated si...
A model for nonlinear gas bubble pulsation in marine sediments is presented. This model is then line...
More than three decades ago, Anderson and Hampton [1, 2] (A&H) presented theories for wave propa...
Underwater bubbles are prevalent in the marine environment, from natural sources such as breaking wa...
A model for the high-frequency backscatter angular response of gassy sediments is proposed. For the ...
Acoustic data from two long cores, comprising marine clays and silts taken from Emerald Basin off No...
Models of acoustic backscatter typically take into account two different processes: interface scatte...