scholarly journals Integral equations of a rectilinear ribbon vibrator near a perfectly conducting infinite screen

2021 ◽  
Vol 2052 (1) ◽  
pp. 012040
Author(s):  
A V Sochilin ◽  
S I Eminov

Abstract The problem of excitation of a rectilinear ribbon vibrator near a perfectly conducting infinite screen is considered. A general equation, a two-dimensional integral equation, and a one-dimensional integral equation with respect to the current density are obtained. The results of numerical calculations are presented.

1986 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. E. Wilson

A new singular integral equation method has been developed for solving the full nonlinear potential flow about an arbitrary body. The method bears some resemblance to conventional integral methods, however it is inherently different in that the surface geometry is contained explicitly in the resulting integral equations. Several analytical results are exploited to reduce the two-dimensional integral equations to a one-dimensional problem on the body surface. The integral equation is inverted so that the airfoil geometry is given as an explicit function of the velocity field. The resulting one-dimensional integral equations are solved numerically and the results are compared with existing theoretical methods for both analysis and inverse design problems.


2004 ◽  
Vol 45 (4) ◽  
pp. 495-510
Author(s):  
D. P. Bulte ◽  
L. K. Forbes ◽  
S. Crozier

AbstractA system of new integral equations is presented. They are derived from Maxwell's equations and describe radio-frequency (RF) current densities on a two-dimensional flat plate. The equations are generalisations of Pocklington's integral equation showing phase-retardation in two dimensions. These singular equations are solved, numerically, for the case of one-dimensional geometry. The solutions are shown to display effects which correspond to damped resonance when the wavelength of the current matches aspects of the geometry of the conductor.


1982 ◽  
Vol 14 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 241-261 ◽  
Author(s):  
P A Krenkel ◽  
R H French

The state-of-the-art of surface water impoundment modeling is examined from the viewpoints of both hydrodynamics and water quality. In the area of hydrodynamics current one dimensional integral energy and two dimensional models are discussed. In the area of water quality, the formulations used for various parameters are presented with a range of values for the associated rate coefficients.


2011 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 111-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Bazrafshan ◽  
A.H. Mahbobi ◽  
A. Neyrameh ◽  
A. Sousaraie ◽  
M. Ebrahimi

Author(s):  
M. Tahami ◽  
A. Askari Hemmat ◽  
S. A. Yousefi

In one-dimensional problems, the Legendre wavelets are good candidates for approximation. In this paper, we present a numerical method for solving two-dimensional first kind Fredholm integral equation. The method is based upon two-dimensional linear Legendre wavelet basis approximation. By applying tensor product of one-dimensional linear Legendre wavelet we construct a two-dimensional wavelet. Finally, we give some numerical examples.


In the last few years Copson, Schwinger and others have obtained exact solutions of a number of diffraction problems by expressing these problems in terms of an integral equation which can be solved by the method of Wiener and Hopf. A simpler approach is given, based on a representation of the scattered field as an angular spectrum of plane waves, such a representation leading directly to a pair of ‘dual’ integral equations, which replaces the single integral equation of Schwinger’s method. The unknown function in each of these dual integral equations is that defining the angular spectrum, and when this function is known the scattered field is presented in the form of a definite integral. As far as the ‘radiation’ field is concerned, this integral is of the type which may be approximately evaluated by the method of steepest descents, though it is necessary to generalize the usual procedure in certain circumstances. The method is appropriate to two-dimensional problems in which a plane wave (of arbitrary polarization) is incident on plane, perfectly conducting structures, and for certain configurations the dual integral equations can be solved by the application of Cauchy’s residue theorem. The technique was originally developed in connexion with the theory of radio propagation over a non-homogeneous earth, but this aspect is not discussed. The three problems considered are those for which the diffracting plates, situated in free space, are, respectively, a half-plane, two parallel half-planes and an infinite set of parallel half-planes; the second of these is illustrated by a numerical example. Several points of general interest in diffraction theory are discussed, including the question of the nature of the singularity at a sharp edge, and it is shown that the solution for an arbitrary (three-dimensional) incident field can be derived from the corresponding solution for a two-dimensional incident plane wave.


Electronics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (9) ◽  
pp. 1451
Author(s):  
Mario Lucido ◽  
Mykhaylo V. Balaban ◽  
Sergii Dukhopelnykov ◽  
Alexander I. Nosich

In this paper, the analysis of the electromagnetic scattering from a thin dielectric disk is formulated as two sets of one-dimensional integral equations in the vector Hankel transform domain by taking advantage of the revolution symmetry of the problem and by imposing the generalized boundary conditions on the disk surface. The problem is further simplified by means of Helmholtz decomposition, which allows to introduce new scalar unknows in the spectral domain. Galerkin method with complete sets of orthogonal eigenfunctions of the static parts of the integral operators, reconstructing the physical behavior of the fields, as expansion bases, is applied to discretize the integral equations. The obtained matrix equations are Fredholm second-kind equations whose coefficients are efficiently numerically evaluated by means of a suitable analytical technique. Numerical results and comparisons with the commercial software CST Microwave Studio are provided showing the accuracy and efficiency of the proposed technique.


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