Author_Institution :
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Texas at Austin, 78712, USA
Abstract :
Scattering from inhomogeneous objects whose constitutive relationship for the electric-flux density can be expressed in terms of a time-varying permittivity ε (r,t) as D(r,t) ε (r,t)E(r,t) is of interest in a variety of high-power and optical applications; e.g., space-time modulation of permittivity has been recently explored as a mechanism for designing non-reciprocal ring resonators (D. L. Sounas and A. Alù, IEEE Antennas Propagat. Soc. Int. Symp., 2014). Because of frequency mixing introduced by the temporal change in ε, traditional frequency-domain analysis is inapplicable and transient analysis in time-domain is the natural approach for finding the scattered fields. Indeed, various finite-difference time-domain (X. Liu and D. McNamara, Int. J. Infrared Millim. Waves, 28(9), 2007) and time-domain integral-equation (F. V. Fedotov, et. al., J. of Lightwave Tech., 21(1), 2003) methods have already been used for this analysis. Such time-domain simulations, however, can be very expensive when ε varies slowly compared to the rate of change of fields (as is often the case). This is because the time-step size used must be small enough to resolve the fast variations of the fields while the time interval that is analyzed must be long enough to capture all the effects of the varying material property (determined in part by the largest distance the fields must travel across the object and any resonances). As these two time scales become more disparate, the computational costs of time-domain methods increase and alternative methods become more attractive. For example, the number of time steps that must be simulated can be drastically reduced by envelope-tracking methods (G. Kaur and A. E. Yılmaz, Proc. IEEE Antennas Propagat. Soc. Int. Symp., 2011) that use larger time steps that are dictated by the bandwidth rather than the maximum frequency content of the fields.