An effective fractional paraxial wave equation for wave-fronts in randomly layered media with long-range correlations
Christophe Gomez

TL;DR
This paper develops a fractional paraxial wave equation to model high-frequency wave-fronts in long-range correlated randomly layered media, revealing new insights into pulse deformation and travel time fluctuations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel fractional paraxial wave equation incorporating long-range correlations, extending standard models to account for fractional derivatives and frequency-dependent effects.
Findings
Random travel time characterized by fractional Brownian motion with large standard deviation.
Deterministic pulse deformation described by a fractional Weyl derivative.
Frequency-dependent power law attenuation and phase modulation consistent with causality.
Abstract
This work concerns the asymptotic analysis of high-frequency wave propagation in randomly layered media with fast variations and long-range correlations. The analysis takes place in the 3D physical space and weak-coupling regime. The role played by the slow decay of the correlations on a propagating pulse is two fold. First we observe a random travel time characterized by a fractional Brownian motion that appears to have a standard deviation larger than the pulse width, which is in contrast with the standard O'Doherty-Anstey theory for random propagation media with mixing properties. Second, a deterministic pulse deformation is described as the solution of a paraxial wave equation involving a pseudo-differential operator. This operator is characterized by the autocorrelation function of the medium fluctuations. In case of fluctuations with long-range correlations this operator is close…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOcean Waves and Remote Sensing · Nonlinear Photonic Systems · Differential Equations and Numerical Methods
