Scattering-based numerical methods are increasingly applied to the numerical simulation of distributed time-dependent physical systems. These methods, which possess excellent stability and stability verification properties, have appeared in various guises as the transmission line matrix (TLM) method
Wave and scattering methods for numerical simulation
β Scribed by Stefan Bilbao
- Book ID
- 127456224
- Publisher
- J. Wiley
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 2 MB
- Category
- Library
- City
- Chichester, West Sussex, England; Hoboken, N.J
- ISBN
- 0470870184
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Reliable prediction through modelling forms the basis of engineering design. Circuit-based methods for the numerical integration of partial differential equations offer electronic and electrical engineers a simple and verifiable technique for defining efficient and stable models. The digital waveguide method, traditionally popular in the field of sound synthesis, becomes less reliable when applied to multidimensional systems and/or non-ideal media.- Provides a comprehensive overview of circuit-based numerical integration methods.
- Presents a unified simulation method with potential applications in electromagnetics, acoustics, mechanics and digital signal processing.* The first book to cover these important simulation techniques in the English language.* Extends the application of traditional EE techniques to problems in civil and mechanical engineering bringing together four distinct research communities: wave digital filters, digital waveguide mesh, transmission line matrix, and general finite differences.
The author investigates the relationship between this method and other techniques such as wave digital filters, and develops a unified general numerical simulation method that can be applied to a range of distributed systems in electromagnetics, acoustics and mechanics.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Scattering of Electromagnetic Waves offers in three volumes a complete and up-to-date treatment of wave scattering by random discrete scatterers and rough surfaces. Written by leading scientists who have made important contributions to wave scattering over three decades, this new work explains the p