Diffraction by a half plane perpendicular to the distinguished axis of a gyrotropic medium (oblique incidence)

1981 ◽  
Vol 59 (3) ◽  
pp. 403-424 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Przeździecki ◽  
R. A. Hurd

An exact, closed form solution is found for the following half plane diffraction problem. (I) The medium surrounding the half plane is gyrotropic. (II) The scattering half plane is perfectly conducting and oriented perpendicular to the distinguished axis of the medium. (III) The direction of propagation of the incident electromagnetic plane wave is arbitrary (skew) with respect to the edge of the half plane. The result presented is a generalization of a solution for the same problem with incidence normal to the edge of the half plane (two-dimensional case).The fundamental, distinctive feature of the problem is that it constitutes a boundary value problem for a system of two coupled second order partial differential equations. All previously solved electromagnetic diffraction problems reduced to boundary value problems for either one or two uncoupled second order equations. (Exception: the two-dimensional case of the present problem.) The problem is formulated in terms of the (generalized) scalar Hertz potentials and leads to a set of two coupled Wiener–Hopf equations. This set, previously thought insoluble by quadratures, yields to the Wiener–Hopf–Hilbert method.The three-dimensional solution is synthesized from appropriate solutions to two-dimensional problems. Peculiar waves of ghost potentials, which correspond to zero electromagnetic fields play an essential role in this synthesis. The problem is two-moded: that is, superpositions of both ordinary and extraordinary waves are necessary for the spectral representation of the solution. An important simplifying feature of the problem is that the coupling of the modes is purely due to edge diffraction, there being no reflection coupling. The solution is simple in that the Fourier transforms of the potentials are just algebraic functions. Basic properties of the solution are briefly discussed.

1977 ◽  
Vol 55 (4) ◽  
pp. 305-324 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Przeździecki ◽  
R. A. Hurd

An exact, closed-form solution is found for the following half-plane diffraction problem: (I) The medium surrounding the half-plane is both electrically and magnetically gyrotropic. (II) The scattering half-plane is perfectly conducting and oriented perpendicular to the distinguished axis of the medium. (III) The incident electromagnetic plane wave propagates in a direction normal to the edge of the half-plane.The formulation of the problem leads to a coupled pair of Wiener–Hopf equations. These had previously been thought insoluble by quadratures, but yield to a newly discovered technique : the Wiener–Hopf–Hilbert method. A basic feature of the problem is its two-mode character i.e. plane waves of both modes are necessary for the spectral representation of the solution. The coupling of these modes is purely due to edge diffraction, there being no reflection coupling. The solution obtained is simple in that the Fourier transforms of the field components are just algebraic functions. Properties of the solution are investigated in some special cases.


Green’s functions are obtained for the boundary-value problems of mixed type describing the general two-dimensional diffraction problems at a screen in the form of a half-plane (Sommerfeld’s problem), applicable to acoustically rigid or soft screens, and to the full electromagnetic field at a perfectly conducting screen.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 226-231
Author(s):  
Mikhail V. Urev ◽  
Kholmatzhon Kh. Imomnazarov ◽  
Ilham K. Iskandarov

This paper considers a boundary value problem for an overdetermined system of equations in a half-plane. This problem arises in particular when solving a stationary system of the two-velocity hydrodynamics with one pressure and homogeneous divergent conditions and the Dirichlet boundary conditions for two phase velocities, as well as in problems of electrodynamics. The generalized solution to a stationary system of the two-velocity hydrodynamics in the case of two-dimensional unbounded domains, for instance, in a half-plane, has a significant difference from the three-dimensional case. Namely, in the two-dimensional case for the velocities it is impossible to satisfy the pre-set conditions at infinity and the condition of boundedness at infinity is imposed. In this case, the medium is considered to be homogeneous, and the energy dissipation occurs due to the shear viscosities of the phases of the subsystems, and other effects are not discussed in this paper. The mass transfer occurs due to the mass force. With an appropriate choice of functional spaces, the existence and uniqueness of a generalized solution with an appropriate stability estimate has been proved.


The two-dimensional wave diffraction problem, acoustic or electromagnetic, in which a pulse of step-function time dependence is diffracted by a resistive half-plane is solved by assuming dynamic similarity in the solution.


1958 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 95-103 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. C. Butcher ◽  
J. S. Lowndes

Much of the work on the theory of diffraction by an infinite wedge has been for cases of harmonic time-dependence. Oberhettinger (1) obtained an expression for the Green's function of the wave equation in the two dimensional case of a line source of oscillating current parallel to the edge of a wedge with perfectly conducting walls. Solutions of the time-dependent wave equation have been obtained by Keller and Blank (2), Kay (3) and more recently by Turner (4) who considered the diffraction of a cylindrical pulse by a half plane.


1981 ◽  
Vol 59 (12) ◽  
pp. 1879-1885 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. A. Hurd ◽  
E. Lüneburg

We consider the diffraction of a scalar plane wave by two parallel half-planes. On one half-plane the total field vanishes whilst on the other its normal derivative is zero. This is a new canonical diffraction problem and we give an exact closed-form solution to it. The problem has applications to the design of acoustic barriers.


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