I try to express the relation between:
- the delay obtained by maximizing the cross-correlation between two signals $x$ and $y$ noted $\tau_{x,y}$ and
- the phase velocity noted $v_p(\omega)$
In the case where:
- The signals $x$ and $y$ are spaced by a constant distance $\Delta$
- The signal $y$ is a shifted version - at speed $v_p(\omega)$ - of the signal $x$, i.e.$Y(\omega)=X(\omega)e^{-j\omega\Delta/v_p(\omega)}$ ; with $X(\omega)$ and $Y(\omega)$ the Fourier transforms of $x$ and $y$
With these assumptions, the delay that corresponds to the maximum correlation between $x$ and $y$ is expressed as:
$$\tau_{x,y} = \text{max}_t \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} |X(\omega)|^2e^{j\omega(t+\Delta/v_p(\omega))}d\omega $$
I can't manage to go any further. Is it possible to go further and express $\tau_{x,y}$ as a function of $v_p(\omega)$? Perhaps by adding the assumption of white signal, i.e. $|X(\omega)|=1$?