Title :
ARMA implementation of diffraction operators with inverse-root singularities
Author :
Dalton, David R. ; Yedlin, Matthew J.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Geophys. & Astron., British Columbia Univ., Vancouver, BC, Canada
fDate :
6/1/1990 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The integral of a time-domain diffraction operator which has an integrable inverse-root singularity and an infinite tail is numerically differentiated to get a truncated digital form of the operator. This truncated difference operator effectively simulates the singularity but is computationally inefficient and produces a convolutional truncation ghost. The authors therefore use a least-squares method to model an equivalent autoregressive moving-average (ARMA) filter on the difference operator. The recursive convolution of the ARMA filter with a wavelet has no truncation ghost and an error below 1% of the peak diffraction amplitude. Design and application of the ARMA filter reduces computer (CPU) time by 42% over that repaired with direct convolution. A combination of filter design at a coarse spatial sampling, angular interpolation of filter coefficients to a finer sampling, and recursive application reduces CPU time by 83% over direct convolution or 80% over Fourier convolution, which also has truncation error
Keywords :
electromagnetic wave diffraction; filtering and prediction theory; inverse problems; least squares approximations; time-domain analysis; ARMA filter; CPU time; angular interpolation; autoregressive moving-average; coarse spatial sampling; convolutional truncation ghost; electromagnetic diffraction; infinite tail; inverse-root singularity; least-squares method; recursive convolution; time-domain diffraction operator; truncated difference operator; wavelet; Application software; Computational modeling; Computer errors; Convolution; Diffraction; Filters; Interpolation; Sampling methods; Tail; Time domain analysis;
Journal_Title :
Antennas and Propagation, IEEE Transactions on