Title :
A Magnetic Field-Independent Absorbing Boundary Condition for Magnetized Cold Plasma
Author :
Yu, Yaxin ; Simpson, Jamesina J.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, USA
fDate :
7/3/1905 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
An effective absorbing boundary condition (ABC) based on the second-order approximations of Engquist and Majda´s wave equations is presented for terminating three-dimensional finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) models employing the E-J collocated magnetized cold plasma algorithm. Numerical tests demonstrate that this ABC can effectively terminate magnetized plasma models involving arbitrary and spatially varying directions of the background magnetic field, a capability that is not provided by the recently developed KPML or NIMPML for magnetized cold plasma. This new capability will permit implementation of the Engquist and Majda-based ABC of this letter into localized and particularly global FDTD models of the Earth-ionosphere system involving varying directions of the magnetic field throughout the grid. An accuracy and stability analysis of this ABC is presented. Reflection errors are shown to be consistently less than 5% for various magnetic field directions and for magnetized plasmas having different electron densities by incorporating the phase velocity calculated at the center frequency of the source spectrum into the ABC formulation.
Keywords :
absorbing media; approximation theory; electromagnetic wave reflection; finite difference time-domain analysis; ionospheric electromagnetic wave propagation; magnetic fields; wave equations; E-J collocated magnetized cold plasma algorithm; Earth-ionosphere system; Engquist-based ABC; FDTD model; Majda-based ABC; background magnetic field; magnetic field-independent absorbing boundary condition; reflection error; second-order approximation; stability analysis; three-dimensional finite-difference time-domain model; wave equation; Equations; Finite difference methods; Magnetic fields; Mathematical model; Plasmas; Reflection; Time domain analysis; Absorbing boundary conditions (ABCs); electromagnetic propagation in plasma media; finite-difference methods; ionosphere; plasmas;
Journal_Title :
Antennas and Wireless Propagation Letters, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/LAWP.2011.2139191