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A uniform geometrical theory of diffraction for an edge in a perfectly conducting surface

R.G. Kouyoumjian, +1 more
- Vol. 62, Iss: 11, pp 1448-1461
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TLDR
In this article, a compact dyadic diffraction coefficient for electromagnetic waves obliquely incident on a curved edse formed by perfectly conducting curved plane surfaces is obtained, which is based on Keller's method of the canonical problem, which in this case is the perfectly conducting wedge illuminated by cylindrical, conical, and spherical waves.
Abstract
A compact dyadic diffraction coefficient for electromagnetic waves obliquely incident on a curved edse formed by perfectly conducting curved ot plane surfaces is obtained. This diffraction coefficient remains valid in the transition regions adjacent to shadow and reflection boundaries, where the diffraction coefficients of Keller's original theory fail. Our method is based on Keller's method of the canonical problem, which in this case is the perfectly conducting wedge illuminated by plane, cylindrical, conical, and spherical waves. When the proper ray-fixed coordinate system is introduced, the dyadic diffraction coefficient for the wedge is found to be the sum of only two dyads, and it is shown that this is also true for the dyadic diffraction coefficients of higher order edges. One dyad contains the acoustic soft diffraction coefficient; the other dyad contains the acoustic hard diffraction coefficient. The expressions for the acoustic wedge diffraction coefficients contain Fresenel integrals, which ensure that the total field is continuous at shadow and reflection boundaries. The diffraction coefficients have the same form for the different types of edge illumination; only the arguments of the Fresnel integrals are different. Since diffraction is a local phenomenon, and locally the curved edge structure is wedge shaped, this result is readily extended to the curved wedge. It is interesting that even though the polarizations and the wavefront curvatures of the incident, reflected, and diffracted waves are markedly different, the total field calculated from this high-frequency solution for the curved wedge is continuous at shadow and reflection boundaries.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Estimating the time-delay and frequency decay parameter of scattering components using a modified MUSIC algorithm

TL;DR: In this article, a superresolution technique to determine the time-delay and frequency response of individual components of electromagnetic scattering is presented, which is based on pre-multiplying the scattering data by the inverse of an assumed frequency dependence parameterized by a variable /spl alpha.
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Reflectance model for diffraction

TL;DR: A novel method of simulating wave effects in graphics using ray-based renderers with a new function: the Wave BSDF (Bidirectional Scattering Distribution Function), which circumvent the need to explicitly keep track of the phase of the wave by using BSDFs that include positive as well as negative coefficients.
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Efficient modeling of infinite scatterers using a generalized total-field/scattered-field FDTD boundary partially embedded within PML

TL;DR: In this paper, a generalized total-field/scattered-field (G-TF/SF) formulation for finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) was proposed to model an infinite material scatterer illuminated by an arbitrarily oriented plane wave within a compact FDTD grid.
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Some new results in multiphase geometrical optics

TL;DR: In this article, the scalar wave equation is formulated as a kinetic transport equation set in phase space, and the exact multiphase solution from an associated system of moment equations, closed by an assumption on the form of the density function in the kinetic equation, is recovered.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spectral analysis of high‐frequency diffraction of an arbitrary incident field by a half plane—Comparison with four asymptotic techniques

Yahya Rahmat-Samii, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1978 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the problem of a half plane illuminated by a nonplanar wave is investigated using the concept of the plane wave spectral representation, and a new higher-order asymptotic solution for the total field up to and including terms of order k−5/2 relative to the incident field is derived.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Geometrical Theory of Diffraction

TL;DR: The mathematical justification of the theory on the basis of electromagnetic theory is described, and the applicability of this theory, or a modification of it, to other branches of physics is explained.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ray techniques in electromagnetics

TL;DR: In this paper, a systematic use of matrix representation for the wavefront curvature and for its transformations simplify the handling of arbitrary pencils of rays and, consequently, the field computations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diffraction by an Aperture

TL;DR: In this paper, the geometrical theory of diffraction was introduced to account for diffraction by introducing new rays called diffracted rays, which are produced when incident rays hit the aperture edge.