Title :
A finite element approach to the electromagnetic interaction with rotating penetrable cylinders of arbitrary cross section
Author :
Graglia, Roberto D. ; Freni, Angelo ; Pelosi, Giuseppe
Author_Institution :
CESPA CNR, Politecnico di Torino, Italy
fDate :
5/1/1993 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A method for evaluating the fields excited by an obliquely incident plane wave inside and outside a rotating cylinder is presented. A differential formulation of the problem is developed with respect to the comoving reference frame of the scatterer on a closed circular domain including the scatterer cross section; the boundary conditions account for the far-field conditions through a series expansion of the total field on the domain contour. The results at oblique incidence are then particularized for normal incidence and a hybrid finite element numerical solution is presented and discussed for TM incidence. The present FEM approach and the related computer code are directly applicable to the study of rotating piecewise-homogeneous cylinders at normal incidence, as well as metallic cylinders coated by layers of penetrable materials. Through a comparison, for normal incidence, between the quasi-stationary and the Galileian relativistic approach, a method for approximately reconstructing the Doppler frequency shift in the quasi-stationary method is derived. Far-field and near-field numerical results for circular and arbitrarily shaped (metallic or dielectric) cylinders are presented
Keywords :
electromagnetic wave scattering; finite element analysis; Doppler frequency shift; Galileian relativistic approach; TM incidence; arbitrary cross section; boundary conditions; circular cylinders; closed circular domain; comoving reference frame; differential formulation; electromagnetic interaction; electromagnetic scattering; far-field conditions; far-field numerical results; finite element approach; metallic cylinders; near-field numerical results; normal incidence; numerical solution; obliquely incident plane wave; piecewise-homogeneous cylinders; quasi-stationary method; rotating penetrable cylinders; scatterer cross section; Boundary conditions; Electromagnetic fields; Electromagnetic scattering; Engine cylinders; Finite element methods; Inorganic materials; Laboratories; Maxwell equations; Power engineering and energy; Radar scattering;
Journal_Title :
Antennas and Propagation, IEEE Transactions on