A hybrid method of moment (MoM) and physical optics (PO) technique in the time domain

Author(s):  
Zicong Mei ◽  
T. K. Sarkar ◽  
Yu Zhang ◽  
M. Salazar-Palma
Author(s):  
Niels Hørbye Christiansen ◽  
Per Erlend Torbergsen Voie ◽  
Jan Høgsberg ◽  
Nils Sødahl

Dynamic analyses of slender marine structures are computationally expensive. Recently it has been shown how a hybrid method which combines FEM models and artificial neural networks (ANN) can be used to reduce the computation time spend on the time domain simulations associated with fatigue analysis of mooring lines by two orders of magnitude. The present study shows how an ANN trained to perform nonlinear dynamic response simulation can be optimized using a method known as optimal brain damage (OBD) and thereby be used to rank the importance of all analysis input. Both the training and the optimization of the ANN are based on one short time domain simulation sequence generated by a FEM model of the structure. This means that it is possible to evaluate the importance of input parameters based on this single simulation only. The method is tested on a numerical model of mooring lines on a floating off-shore installation. It is shown that it is possible to estimate the cost of ignoring one or more input variables in an analysis.


Author(s):  
F. Le Bolzer ◽  
R. Gillard ◽  
J. Citerne ◽  
V. Fouad Hanna ◽  
M. F. Wong

2007 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 107-113
Author(s):  
A. Becker ◽  
V. Hansen

Abstract. In this paper a hybrid method combining the Time-Domain Method of Moments (TD-MoM), the Time-Domain Uniform Theory of Diffraction (TD-UTD) and the Finite-Difference Time-Domain Method (FDTD) is presented. When applying this new hybrid method, thin-wire antennas are modeled with the TD-MoM, inhomogeneous bodies are modelled with the FDTD and large perfectly conducting plates are modelled with the TD-UTD. All inhomogeneous bodies are enclosed in a so-called FDTD-volume and the thin-wire antennas can be embedded into this volume or can lie outside. The latter avoids the simulation of white space between antennas and inhomogeneous bodies. If the antennas are positioned into the FDTD-volume, their discretization does not need to agree with the grid of the FDTD. By using the TD-UTD large perfectly conducting plates can be considered efficiently in the solution-procedure. Thus this hybrid method allows time-domain simulations of problems including very different classes of objects, applying the respective most appropriate numerical techniques to every object.


1981 ◽  
Vol 21 (01) ◽  
pp. 129-140 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.N. Sharma ◽  
R.G. Dean

Abstract Most methods for wave force computation incorporate either the nonlinearities of the ocean surface for a single fundamental component or the random and/or directional characteristics using superposition of linear wave components. One exception is the intuitive "hybrid" method, which combines elements of linear and nonlinear waves. This paper describes and applies a method correct to the second order in wave height for calculating waves and wave forces caused by a directional wave spectrum on an offshore structure.Starting with a prescribed linear spectrum of directional waves, a set of random phases is generated and the second-order spectrum computed with phases defined by all contributing pairs of first-order components. Thus, with one realization of the spectrum complete up to the second order, the wave profile and water particle kinematics can be profile and water particle kinematics can be simulated in the time domain. The wave forces also are computed in the time domain, taking full account of their nonlinear and directional properties. The resulting wave forces at any level vary in direction and magnitude. The total wave forces summed over all piling of a structure are less than those for a unidirectional train of waves with the same one-dimensional spectrum.Several examples are presented to illustrate reductions in maximum wave forces caused by the directional distribution of waves. We found that for a single piling the maximum force decreases by a factor ranging from 1.0 to 0.61 as the directional spread increases from unidirectional to uniformity over a half plane. For a four-pile group on a square array of 300-ft (91.4-m) spacing, the corresponding decrease in the factor is 1.0 to 0.51 for a Bretschneider spectrum with a peak period of approximately 12 seconds. The results of this complete model are compared with the more intuitive and approximate hybrid method and are found to agree quite well. Force spectra are presented and discussed for the inline and transverse directions. Introduction The nonlinearity, randomness, and directionality of a real sea preclude a simple but realistic determination of wave loading on a single- or multiple-pile group. Presently, there are two essentially different but complementary methods for computing wave loadings. One method represents nonlinearities of a single wave composed of a characteristic fundamental period and its higher harmonics. A number period and its higher harmonics. A number of such theories have been-developed. Dalrymple extended the stream function approach of Dean, to waves on a shear current. Some of these theories adequately account for the nonlinearities; however, they avoid the random and directional characteristics of the sea surface. The second method uses the principle of linear superposition of an infinite principle of linear superposition of an infinite number of waves with given frequencies, amplitudes, and directions of propagation but independent phases; the total energy is distributed over a phases; the total energy is distributed over a continuum of frequencies and directions. In this manner, a three-dimensional Gaussian sea can be represented fully. However, ignoring the nonlinearities makes the random Gaussian model unrealistic - especially for large waves. SPEJ P. 129


2005 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 431-436
Author(s):  
A. Becker ◽  
V. Hansen

Abstract. A time domain Method of Moments algorithm (TD-MoM) is combined with the time domain version of the Uniform Theory of Diffraction (TD-UTD). By use of the TD-MoM the fields radiated from thin wire structures positioned in free space are determined. The TD-UTD is applied to calculate the fields scattered by a perfectly conducting screen. Both techniques are hybridized by adding possible reflected and diffracted fields in the TD-MoM algorithm and by using the TD-MoM solution to calculate the fields which impinge on to the screen. To show the accuracy of the developed hybrid method, numerical results are compared to results obtained by established frequency domain numerical codes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (5) ◽  
pp. 351-358
Author(s):  
Jihyo Choi ◽  
Il-Suek Koh

An automotive radar simulator is proposed that can consider a dynamic driving scenario. The impulse response is computed based on the distance between the radar and the mesh position and the radar equation. The first-order physical optics technique is used to calculate the backscattering by the meshes, which can efficiently consider the shape of the target; however, because the radar operating frequency is very high, the required amount of mesh for discretization is large. Hence, the calculation of the time-domain echo signal requires considerable computational time. To reduce this numerical complexity, a new scheme is proposed to accurately approximate the time-domain baseband signal generated by the large number of meshes. The radar adopts the frequency modulated continuous waveform. Range-Doppler processing is used to estimate the range and relative velocity of the targets based on which simulation results are numerically verified for a driving scenario.


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