Title :
Second-order absorbing boundary conditions for the FD-TLM method analysis of open-region scattering problems
Author :
Jing Meng ; Narayanan, R.M. ; Voelker, R.H.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Nebraska Univ., Lincoln, NE, USA
Abstract :
Voelker and Lomax (1990) developed the finite-difference transmission-line-matrix (FD-TLM) method for the full-wave time domain analysis of the electromagnetic properties of integrated circuits, with perfectly conducting boundary conditions to terminate the computational domain. The present paper extends the utility of the FD-TLM method for solving open region scattering problems in remote sensing applications, by developing and evaluating second-order absorbing boundary conditions (ABCs) for the method. First-order ABCs for the FD-TLM method have been developed in Zhang et al. (1993). The derivation of the ABCs in Cartesian coordinates starts from the Halpern and Trefethen´s second-order approximation of the rational polynomial in the dispersion relation of the one-way wave equation (Trefethen and Halpern, 1986). The ABCs for the edges and corners are obtained by associating sets of approximate PDEs corresponding to the boundaries. The finite-difference time domain (FD-TD) expressions for the ABCs are derived by using a two-level discretization scheme which is proved to be stable (Renaut, 1992). The implementation of the ABCs into the FD-TLM method is finally accomplished through the equivalence between the FD-TD and FD-TLM methods.<>
Keywords :
approximation theory; electromagnetic wave scattering; finite difference methods; polynomials; remote sensing; transmission line matrix methods; Cartesian coordinates; FD-TLM method; FDTD; corners; dispersion relation; edges; finite-difference transmission-line-matrix method; one-way wave equation; open-region scattering problems; rational polynomial; remote sensing; second-order absorbing boundary conditions; second-order approximation; two level discretization scheme; Boundary conditions; Circuit analysis computing; Dispersion; Electromagnetic scattering; Finite difference methods; Lattices; Partial differential equations; Polynomials; Remote sensing; Time domain analysis;
Conference_Titel :
Antennas and Propagation Society International Symposium, 1994. AP-S. Digest
Conference_Location :
Seattle, WA, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-2009-3
DOI :
10.1109/APS.1994.407890