scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Geometrical Theory of Diffraction

Joseph B. Keller
- 01 Feb 1962 - 
- Vol. 52, Iss: 2, pp 116-130
TLDR
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.
Abstract
The geometrical theory of diffraction is an extension of geometrical optics which accounts for diffraction. It introduces diffracted rays in addition to the usual rays of geometrical optics. These rays are produced by incident rays which hit edges, corners, or vertices of boundary surfaces, or which graze such surfaces. Various laws of diffraction, analogous to the laws of reflection and refraction, are employed to characterize the diffracted rays. A modified form of Fermat’s principle, equivalent to these laws, can also be used. Diffracted wave fronts are defined, which can be found by a Huygens wavelet construction. There is an associated phase or eikonal function which satisfies the eikonal equation. In addition complex or imaginary rays are introduced. A field is associated with each ray and the total field at a point is the sum of the fields on all rays through the point. The phase of the field on a ray is proportional to the optical length of the ray from some reference point. The amplitude varies in accordance with the principle of conservation of energy in a narrow tube of rays. The initial value of the field on a diffracted ray is determined from the incident field with the aid of an appropriate diffraction coefficient. These diffraction coefficients are determined from certain canonical problems. They all vanish as the wavelength tends to zero. The theory is applied to diffraction by an aperture in a thin screen diffraction by a disk, etc., to illustrate it. Agreement is shown between the predictions of the theory and various other theoretical analyses of some of these problems. Experimental confirmation of the theory is also presented. The mathematical justification of the theory on the basis of electromagnetic theory is described. Finally, the applicability of this theory, or a modification of it, to other branches of physics is explained.

read more

Citations
More filters
Book

Wireless Communications

Journal ArticleDOI

P-SV wave propagation in heterogeneous media: Velocity‐stress finite‐difference method

Jean Virieux
- 01 Apr 1986 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, a finite-difference method for modeling P-SV wave propagation in heterogeneous media is presented, which is an extension of the method I previously proposed for modeling SH-wave propagation by using velocity and stress in a discrete grid, where the stability condition and the P-wave phase velocity dispersion curve do not depend on the Poisson's ratio.
Journal ArticleDOI

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

TL;DR: 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.
Book

Seismic Ray Theory

TL;DR: In this article, the elastodynamics and its simple solutions of dynamic ray tracing are discussed. But they do not consider the effect of the propagation speed of the ray on the propagation.
References
More filters
Book

The optical principles of the diffraction of x-rays.

TL;DR: In this paper, Bragg et al. describe the Optik der R6ntgenstrahlen in Raumgitter and leitet damit fiber zu den experimentellen Methoden and Ergebn]ssen, die den folgenden B~nden vorbehalten bleiben.
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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Geometrical Theory of Diffraction in Inhomogeneous Media

TL;DR: The geometrical theory of diffraction is described in this paper, which is used to determine the diffracted fields in inhomogeneous media, and the boundary value problems are solved exactly and the solutions are expanded asymptotically for high frequencies.