On surface radiation conditions for high-frequency wave scattering
From MaRDI portal
Publication:883454
DOI10.1016/j.cam.2006.02.045zbMath1139.78004OpenAlexW2164999760MaRDI QIDQ883454
Publication date: 4 June 2007
Published in: Journal of Computational and Applied Mathematics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cam.2006.02.045
Diffraction, scattering (78A45) Bessel and Airy functions, cylinder functions, ({}_0F_1) (33C10) Waves and radiation in optics and electromagnetic theory (78A40)
Related Items (8)
Standard and phase reduced isogeometric on-surface radiation conditions for acoustic scattering analyses ⋮ DtN and NtD surface radiation conditions for two-dimensional acoustic scattering: formal derivation and numerical validation ⋮ On-surface radiation condition for multiple scattering of waves ⋮ Iterative on surface radiation conditions for fast and reliable single and multiple scattering analyses of arbitrarily shaped obstacles ⋮ Formulation and accuracy of on-surface radiation conditions for acoustic multiple scattering problems ⋮ Local on-surface radiation condition for multiple scattering of waves from convex obstacles ⋮ High order surface radiation conditions for time-harmonic waves in exterior domains ⋮ LONG-TERM STABILITY ANALYSIS OF ACOUSTIC ABSORBING BOUNDARY CONDITIONS
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Bayliss-Turkel-like radiation conditions on surfaces of arbitrary shape
- Visibility and its dynamics in a PDE based implicit framework
- Radiation boundary conditions for wave-like equations
- Boundary Conditions for the Numerical Solution of Elliptic Equations in Exterior Regions
- Absorbing Boundary Conditions for the Numerical Simulation of Waves
- A new formulation of electromagnetic wave scattering using an on-surface radiation boundary condition approach
- Low-Frequency Electromagnetic Scattering
- Rapid Evaluation of Nonreflecting Boundary Kernels for Time-Domain Wave Propagation
This page was built for publication: On surface radiation conditions for high-frequency wave scattering