Weight of single and recurrent scattering in the reflection matrix of complex media
C\'ecile Br\"utt, Alexandre Aubry, Beno\^it G\'erardin, Arnaud Derode,, Claire Prada

TL;DR
This paper investigates the contributions of single and recurrent multiple scattering in complex media using reflection matrix analysis, revealing biases in estimators and proposing a more robust focused basis approach validated by simulations and ultrasonic experiments.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of recurrent scattering effects on single scattering estimators and proposes a focused basis method to improve their robustness.
Findings
Recurrent scattering causes bias in single scattering estimators.
A focused basis projection yields a more robust scattering ratio estimator.
Numerical and ultrasonic experiments validate the proposed approach.
Abstract
In a heterogeneous medium, the wavefield can be decomposed as an infinite series known as the Born expansion. Each term of the Born expansion corresponds to a scattering order, it is thus theoretically possible to discriminate single and multiple scattering field components. Experimentally, what is actually measured is the total field in which all scattering orders interfere. Conventional imaging methods usually rely on the assumption that the multiple scattering contribution can be disregarded. In a back-scattering configuration, this assumption is valid for small depths, and begins to fail for depths larger than the scattering mean-free path . It is therefore a key issue to estimate the relative amount of single and multiple scattering in experimental data. To this end, a single scattering estimator computed from the reflection matrix has been introduced in order…
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