Attenuation of acoustic waves in glacial ice and salt domes
P. B. Price

TL;DR
This paper investigates how acoustic waves attenuate in glacial ice and salt domes, calculating absorption and scattering coefficients to assess their suitability for neutrino detection via acoustic methods.
Contribution
It provides theoretical calculations of acoustic wave attenuation in ice and salt, validated by experimental data, informing neutrino detection strategies using these media.
Findings
Ice has absorption as the limiting attenuation factor.
Salt has scattering as the main attenuation mechanism.
Calculated attenuation lengths support the feasibility of acoustic neutrino detection.
Abstract
Two classes of natural solid media (glacial ice and salt domes) are under consideration as media in which to deploy instruments for detection of neutrinos with energy >1e18 eV. Though insensitive to 1e11 to 1e16 eV neutrinos for which observatories (e.g., AMANDA and IceCube) that utilize optical Cherenkov radiation detectors are designed, radio and acoustic methods are suited for searches for the very low fluxes of neutrinos with energies >1017 eV. This is because, due to the very long attenuation lengths of radio and acoustic waves in ice and salt, detection modules can be spaced very far apart. In this paper, I calculate the absorption and scattering coefficients as a function of frequency and grain size for acoustic waves in glacial ice and salt domes and show that experimental measurements on laboratory samples and in glacial ice and salt domes are consistent with theory. For South…
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