4 research outputs found

    Doppler characteristics of sea surface reflected and scattered acoustic signals induced by surface wave motion

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    Acoustic model-based matched filter processing for fading time-dispersive ocean channels: Theory and experiment

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    Propagation effects degrade the performance of active sonar systems operating in either deep or shallow water. The ocean medium distorts the transmitted signals by time dispersion and as a result, the performance (signal-to-noise ratio) of correlation receivers is reduced if the receiver does not account for energy spreading. Results from this study demonstrate that the performance of a conventional matched filter can be improved if the reference (replica) channel compensates for the distortion. A model-based matched filter is generated by correlating the received signal with a reference channel that consists of the transmitted signal convolved with the impulse response of the medium. The channel impulse responses are predicted with a broadband propagation model using in situ sound speed measured data and archival bottom loss data. The relative performance of conventional and model-based matched filter processing is compared for large time-bandwidth product linear frequency modulated signals propagating in a dispersive waveguide. From ducted propagation measurements conducted in an area west of Sardinia, the model-based matched filter localizes the depths of both the source and receiving array and the range between them. The peak signal-to-noise ratio for the model-based matched filter is always larger than the conventional. © 1993 IEEEinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe

    The AXB and BXA set of recombinant inbred mouse strains.

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    The recombinant inbred (RI) set of strains, AXB and BXA, derived from C57BL/6J and A/J, originally constructed and maintained at the University of California/San Diego, have been imported into The Jackson Laboratory and are now in the 29th to 59th generation of brother-sister matings. Genetic quality control testing with 45 proviral and 11 biochemical markers previously typed in this RI set indicated that five strains had been genetically contaminated sometime in the past, so these strains have been discarded. The correct and complete strain distribution patterns for 56 genetic markers are reported for the remaining RI strain set, which consists of 31 living strains and 8 extinct strains for which DNA is available. Two additional strains, AXB 12 and BXA 17, are living and may be added to the set pending further tests of genetic purity. The progenitors of this RI set differ in susceptibility to 27 infectious diseases as well as atherosclerosis, obesity, diabetes, cancer, cleft palate, and hydrocephalus. Thus, the AXB and BXA set of RI strains will be useful in the genetic analysis of several complex diseases
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