Author_Institution :
Div. of Electron. Sci. & Technol., Naval Res. Lab., Washington, DC, USA
Abstract :
Although weighted residual techniques are extremely general and may be applied to both very arbitrary linear media of highly complex anisotropic character as well as nonlinear media, there are some places where one could cite the desire to maintain a variational approach. It is for these cases that we here address the properties of the auxiliary method for treating differing degrees of anisotropy, including but not limited to gyroelectric, gyromagnetic chiral, gyroelectromagnetic, gyroelectrochiral, gyromagnetochiral, and gyroelectromagnetochiral. What the adjoint method is capable of doing and its limitations will be discussed in view of the auxiliary method. Issues such as inner product boundary conditions, adjoint media, adjoint fields, non-self-adjointness, nonhermiticity, auxiliary vector f function, to name a few, will be considered. These matters have particular significance for problems being solved today using intensive numerical techniques such as finite difference and finite element methods being simulated on PC, MAC, workstation, and mainframe platforms
Keywords :
finite difference methods; finite element analysis; gyromagnetic effect; magnetic anisotropy; magnetic fields; variational techniques; adjoint fields; adjoint media; adjoint methods; anisotropic media electromagnetic problems; anisotropy; arbitrary linear media; auxiliary vector f function; auxiliary vector function; finite difference; gyroelectric; gyroelectrochiral; gyroelectromagnetic; gyroelectromagnetochiral; gyromagnetic chiral; gyromagnetochiral; highly complex anisotropic character; inner product boundary conditions; non-self-adjointness; nonhermiticity; nonlinear media; variational approach; weighted residual techniques; Anisotropic magnetoresistance; Boundary conditions; Equations; Finite difference methods; Finite element methods; Gyromagnetism; Laboratories; Microwave technology; Microwave theory and techniques; Workstations;