Jianqing WANG Hideaki SEKO Osamu FUJIWARA Toshio NOJIMA
A multi-grid finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) method was applied for numerical dosimetry analysis in the human head for 5 GHz band portable terminals. By applying fine FDTD grids to the volumes in the human head where the highest electromagnetic (EM) absorption occurs and coarse grids to the remaining volumes of the head, the spatial peak specific absorption rate (SAR) assessment was achieved with a less computation memory and time. The accuracy of applying the multi-grid FDTD method to the spatial peak SAR assessment was checked in comparison with the results obtained from the usual uniform-grid method, and then the spatial peak SARs for three typical situations of a person using a 5.2 GHz band portable terminal were calculated in conjunction with an anatomically based human head model.
This paper describes an electromagnetically coupled microstrip divider that provides high output port isolation and DC cutting. The device consists of a parasitic resonator placed above microstrip patch resonators, achieving tight coupling for both input and output ports. FDTD simulation and measurements reveal that the device has a high isolation between output ports. Equal and unequal 2-way and 3-way power dividers are presented in this paper.
The boundary integral equation (BIE) on interior walls with surface impedance conditions is implemented to the iterative physical optics method and how to treat the singularities involved in the BIE of an impedance cavity is described. Singular integrals over a rectangular region can be represented by simple elementary functions.
This paper presents a fast inversion method for electromagnetic imaging of cylindrical dielectric objects with the optimal regularization parameter used in the Levenberg-Marquardt method. A novel procedure for choosing the optimal regularization parameter is proposed. The method of moments with pulse-basis functions and point matching is applied to discretize the equations for the scattered electric field and the total electric field inside the object. Then the inverse scattering problem is reduced to solving the matrix equation for the unknown expansion coefficients of a contrast function, which is represented as a function of the relative permittivity of the object. The matrix equation may be solved in the least-squares sense with the Levenberg-Marquardt method. Thus the contrast function can be reconstructed by the minimization of a functional, which is expressed as the sum of a standard error term on the scattered electric field and an additional regularization term. While a regularization parameter is usually chosen according to the generalized cross-validation (GCV) method, the optimal one is now determined by minimizing the absolute value of the radius of curvature of the GCV function. This scheme is quite different from the GCV method. Numerical results are presented for a circular cylinder and a stratified circular cylinder consisting of two concentric homogeneous layers. The convergence behaviors of the proposed method and the GCV method are compared with each other. It is confirmed from the numerical results that the proposed method provides successful reconstructions with the property of much faster convergence than the conventional GCV method.
Hisashi MORISHITA Yongho KIM Kyohei FUJIMOTO
As the capacity of a personal computer and workstation increases rapidly, many electromagnetic simulators solving antenna problems are widely used. In this paper, the IE3D electromagnetic simulator, which is a commercial software product, is applied to the analysis of handset antennas in the vicinity of the human body. Firstly, basic characteristics of popular handset antennas such as whip and planar inverted-F antennas are obtained by the IE3D electromagnetic simulator and calculated results are compared with measured results quoted from the referenced paper. Secondly, on the basis of newly considered design concept for a handset antenna, a loop antenna system for the handset, which we have proposed in order to reduce the influence of human body, is taken as an example of a balance-fed antenna and is analyzed theoretically and experimentally including the influence of the human body. In a result, calculated results by the IE3D electromagnetic simulator are in good agreement with measured results and it is confirmed that the simulator is very effective in analyzing the handset antenna in the vicinity of the human body.
Hiroko O. UEDA Masashi NAKATA Takesi MURATA Hideyuki USUI Masaki OKADA Koichi ITO
We propose the architecture of efficiently and flexibly extensible solver system for electromagnetic wave simulations, that can load multi kinds of schemes such as Finite-Difference Time-Domain (FDTD) scheme, Finite Element Method (FEM), and a circuit simulator, with various boundary conditions in the system. Object-oriented approach is a promising method for efficient development of the flexible simulator. The primary object in the architecture is found through our object-oriented analysis as decomposed "region" from whole the simulation space. The decomposed region is considered to be the stage on which the electromagnetic fields play under the local rules. Developers who will extend the functionality of the system can add new classes inherited from the abstract classes in our design depending on the grid structure, the scheme, or the boundary processing method.
Toshihisa KAMEI Hisashi MORISHITA Chun-Tung CHEUNG David B. RUTLEDGE
As the capacity of the personal computer and workstation increase rapidly, many electromagnetic simulators are widely used. In this paper, Ansoft's High Frequency Structure Simulator (HFSS), which is a commercial software product, is applied to design a mode converter operating at 35 GHz is fabricated based on the simulation results. The numerical results are in good agreement with the measured data.
Although Maxwell's equations have been known for over 100 years, it was not until the last decade that they have seen regular use in applied high frequency design. The availability of sufficient computer processing capability is only part of the reason Maxwell's equations now enjoy regular application. Other developments requiring considerable effort are needed as well. These include increased attention to robustness, software testing, ease of use, portability, integration with other tools, and support. These developments are detailed in this paper.
This paper presents a novel concept of a Two-Dimensional (2-D) Finite-Difference Time-Domain (FDTD) formulation for the numerical analysis of electromagnetic fields. FDTD method proposed by Yee is widely used for such analysis, although it has an inherent problem that there exist half-cell-length and half-time-step distances between electric and magnetic field components. To dissolve such distances, we begin with the finite-difference approximation of the wave equation, not Maxwell's equations. Employing several approximation techniques, we develop a novel algorithm which can condense all field components to equidistant discrete nodes. The proposed algorithm is evaluated in comparison with several conventional algorithms by computer simulations.
Michinari SHIMODA Ryuichi IWAKI Masazumi MIYOSHI Toyonori MATSUDA
The diffraction of a plane electromagnetic wave by an impedance wedge whose boundary is described in terms of the skew coordinate systems is treated by using the Wiener-Hopf technique. The problem is formulated in terms of the simultaneous Wiener-Hopf equations, which are then solved by using a factorization and decomposition procedure and introducing appropriate functions to satisfy the edge condition. The exact solution is expressed through the Maliuzhinets functions. By deforming the integration path of the Fourier inverse transform, which expresses the scattered field, the expressions of the reflected field, diffracted field and the surface wave are obtained. The numerical examples for these fields are given and the characteristics of the surface wave are discussed.
Masayoshi ONO Noriharu SUEMATSU Shunji KUBO Kensuke NAKAJIMA Yoshitada IYAMA Tadashi TAKAGI Osami ISHIDA
For on-chip matching Si-MMIC fabricated on a conventional low resistivity Si substrate, the loss of on-chip inductors is quite high due to the dielectric loss of the substrate. In order to reduce the loss of on-chip matching circuit, the use of high resistivity Si substrate is quite effective. By using electro-magnetic simulation, the relationship between coplanar waveguide (CPW) transmission line characteristics and the resistivity of Si substrate is discussed. Based on the simulated results, the resistivity of Si substrate is designed to achieve lower dielectric loss than conductor loss. The effectiveness of high resistivity Si substrate is evaluated by the extraction of equivalent circuit model parameters of the fabricated on-chip spiral inductors and the measurement of the fabricated on-chip matching Si-MMIC LNA's.
Seiji ADACHI Hiroshi YASUKAWA Ichi TAKUMI Masayasu HATA
We have developed a signal processing method that is appropriate for detecting electromagnetic radiation due to earthquake activities. The radiation is usually accompanied by a background noise that is mainly caused by atmospheric discharges in the tropical regions. Data representing the seismic radiation is presented as sound via the concept of sonification. This is useful for immediately finding out anomalous seismic radiations, which are often followed by a disastrous earthquake, from the massive data collected from over forty observation stations. It is illustrated that the auditory display is valuable for future earthquake prediction systems.
Fuzzy inference abilities were implemented to electromagnetic problems for the first time by the authors. After very successful results of applying the developed fuzzy modeling method to input impedance of a general monopole antenna, in this paper classifying the engineering electromagnetic problems simply, we apply the abilities of the proposed fuzzy inference method to make a qualitative model for transmission lines as a general example for a certain category of problems. The proposed approach starts from observing the problem through the window of human direct understandings and uses some parameters (as calculation base) evaluated basic for modeling process. It is shown that because of using this novel view point, a very simple fuzzy system based on new parameters may model the behavior of a transmission line in general form. The knowledge of each variable can be extracted and saved as simple curves individually, through continuing to make several models considering the desired variable as parameter. Finally, it is shown that the proposed method works even in highly nonuniform transmission line cases without changing in structure and complexity.
In this paper, the electromagnetic scattering from a cylinder with a computer-generated random rough surface is analyzed by a numerical simulation method. The validity of the proposed numerical method is confirmed by comparing the present numerical results with those calculated by the perturbation method to second order and its Pade approximation. It is shown that the present proposed method can be applied to the case where the surface roughness becomes relatively large.
Benjamin E. BARROWES Chi O. AO Fernando L. TEIXEIRA Jin A. KONG Leung TSANG
We study the electromagnetic wave propagation in three-dimensional (3-D) dense random discrete media containing dielectric spheroidal scatterers. We employ a Monte Carlo method in conjunction with the Method of Moments to solve the volume integral equation for the electric field. We calculate the effective permittivity of the random medium through a coherent-field approach and compare our results with a classical mixing formula. A parametric study on the dependence of the effective permittivity on particle elongation and fractional volume is included.
Aria ABUBAKAR Peter M. van den BERG Bert Jan KOOIJ
A method for determination of the location, shape, and material properties of a 3D object from measurements of the scattered field, when the object is successively illuminated by a number of incident fields is presented. This work extends the method previously developed for reconstructions of 2D permittivity and conductivity from electromagnetic measurements to the more complicated full-vector 3D electromagnetic inversion. Furthermore, a frequency hopping strategy to improve the resolution of the unknown objects when the frequency is raised, is underlined. Results of numerical experiments are presented to illustrate both strengths and weaknesses of the method.
Maurizio MIGLIACCIO Maurizio SARTI
In this paper we report the results of a study regarding the backscattering from wind-roughened water surfaces. The reference profile data has been deducted by an experiment held at the University of Heidelberg circular wave tank facility. The scattering theory is based on a fractal description of the surface and a combined use of the Kirchhoff approximation and the small perturbation method (SPM). The scattering results are tested versus the ones obtained via the periodic-surface moment method. The study shows the reliability of the novel approach.
Hideyuki USUI John P. VERBONCOEUR Charles K. BIRDSALL
For plasma simulations, we developed a one-dimensional (1d) Object-Oriented Particle-in-Cell code for X11-based Unix workstations (XOOPIC) by modifying the current two-dimensional version which was originally developed by PTSG (Plasma theory and simulation group) in the University of California at Berkeley. We implemented a simplified field solve and current deposition in the code. We retained three components of particle velocity, although the spatial variation for particle position and field components is limited to one dimension. To verify the function of the 1d code, we perform simulations with typical models such as the Child-Langmuir current model and electromagnetic wave propagation in plasma. In both cases, the simulation results quantitatively agree with the theory.
Fei-Ran YANG Roberto COCCIOLI Yongxi QIAN Tatsuo ITOH
This paper reviews recent progresses in the research and development of planar photonic band-gap (PBG) structures, also called electromagnetic crystals, for microwave and millimeter-wave applications. Planar electromagnetic crystals are particularly attractive and intensively investigated because of their easy fabrication, low cost, and compatibility with standard planar circuit technology. Two configurations and their applications are described in this paper: a square lattice of holes etched in a ground plane and the recently developed Uniplanar Compact PBG (UC-PBG) structure. Basic properties as well as applications to microwave circuits are reported. These include harmonic tuning in power amplifier, leakage suppression in conductor-backed coplanar waveguide (CB-CPW), realization of planar slow-wave structure, and performance improvement in microstrip filters and patch antennas.
The long spikes have been often recorded at the multiples of the electron cyclotron frequency in the ionograms of the topside sounders observed in low latitudes. There has not been sufficient explanation for the physical cause for occourrence of the long spike so far. Here, by interpreting this phenomenon as receiving the trapped cyclotron harmonic wave, some analyses for the length of spike are done not only from the viewpoint of the sweeping property of the frequency spectrum of the transmitted pulse but also from that of the mutual positional relation between the propagation path and the orbit of the sounder. The cause of forming a single spike and a graphical calculation method for the long spike are proposed, respectively. Thus, the cause and the fine structure of long spike consisting of superposed spikes are clarified.