Title :
Multilevel Surface Decomposition Algorithm for Rapid Evaluation of Transient Near-Field to Far-Field Transforms
Author :
Shlivinski, Amir ; Boag, Amir
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Ben-Gurion Univ. of the Negev, Beer-Sheva
Abstract :
A fast multilevel algorithm with reduced memory requirements for the evaluation of transient near-field to far-field transforms is presented. The computational scheme is based on a hierarchical decomposition of an arbitrary shaped enclosing surface over which the near-fields of an antenna or a scatterer are given. For surface subdomains at the highest decomposition level, the angular-temporal far-field patterns are calculated directly from the known near fields over a sparse angular grid of directions and a short temporal duration. The multilevel computation comprises angular and temporal interpolations thus increasing angular resolution and temporal duration of radiation patterns while aggregating the subdomain contributions between successive decomposition levels. These steps are repeated until obtaining the transient far-field response of the whole enclosing surface. The computational complexity of the proposed algorithm is substantially lower than that of the direct evaluation. Reduction in memory requirements is obtained by formulating the algorithm as a marching-on-in-time windowed scheme. This approach allows for embedding of the accelerated transforms within existing near-field modeling tools.
Keywords :
computational complexity; electromagnetic wave scattering; finite difference methods; finite volume methods; interpolation; computational complexity; computational scheme; far-field transforms; finite volume method; hierarchical decomposition; multilevel surface decomposition algorithm; near-field modeling tools; sparse angular grid; transient near-field transform; Antenna radiation patterns; Computational complexity; Computational modeling; Finite difference methods; Noise measurement; Radar scattering; Rough surfaces; Surface roughness; Surface waves; Time domain analysis; Antenna transient analysis; computation time; finite-difference (FD) methods; finite-volume (FV) methods; near-field far-field (NF-FF) transformation;
Journal_Title :
Antennas and Propagation, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TAP.2008.2009730