Rapidly convergent quasi-periodic Green functions for scattering by arrays of cylinders—including Wood anomalies
Abstract
This paper presents a full-spectrum Green-function methodology (which is valid, in particular, at and around Wood-anomaly frequencies) for evaluation of scattering by periodic arrays of cylinders of arbitrary cross section—with application to wire gratings, particle arrays and reflectarrays and, indeed, general arrays of conducting or dielectric bounded obstacles under both transverse electric and transverse magnetic polarized illumination. The proposed method, which, for definiteness, is demonstrated here for arrays of perfectly conducting particles under transverse electric polarization, is based on the use of the shifted Green-function method introduced in a recent contribution (Bruno & Delourme 2014 J. Computat. Phys. 262, 262–290 (doi:10.1016/j.jcp.2013.12.047)). A certain infinite term arises at Wood anomalies for the cylinder-array problems considered here that is not present in the previous rough-surface case. As shown in this paper, these infinite terms can be treated via an application of ideas related to the Woodbury–Sherman–Morrison formulae. The resulting approach, which is applicable to general arrays of obstacles even at and around Wood-anomaly frequencies, exhibits fast convergence and high accuracies. For example, a few hundreds of milliseconds suffice for the proposed approach to evaluate solutions throughout the resonance region (wavelengths comparable to the period and cylinder sizes) with full single-precision accuracy.
Additional Information
© 2017 The Author(s). Published by the Royal Society. Received: 26 October 2016; Accepted: 27 January 2017; Published 1 March 2017. This work was supported by NSF and AFOSR through contracts DMS-1411876 and FA9550-15-1-0043, and by the NSSEFF Vannevar Bush Fellowship under contract no. N00014-16-1-2808. The authors gratefully acknowledge support by NSF and AFOSR as well as the NSSEFF Vannevar Bush Fellowship. Authors' contributions: O.P.B. and A.G.F.-L. contributed to all aspects of this article. No competing interests exist.Attached Files
Submitted - 1610.08567.pdf
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Additional details
- PMCID
- PMC5378244
- Eprint ID
- 76841
- DOI
- 10.1098/rspa.2016.0802
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20170424-093441215
- NSF
- DMS-1411876
- Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR)
- FA9550-15-1-0043
- National Security Science and Engineering Faculty Fellowship
- N00014-16-1-2808
- Created
-
2017-04-24Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2022-03-29Created from EPrint's last_modified field