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1.
J Opt Soc Am A Opt Image Sci Vis ; 37(3): 399-410, 2020 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32118923

ABSTRACT

A semi-analytical approach for rapid calculation of the Green's function inside a cavity of irregular shape over a broad range of frequency is presented. The method is based on the extraction of the Green's function at an imaginary wave number from itself to obtain a rapidly convergent hybrid spatial-spectral expansion of the Green's function. The method is applied to a V-grooved cavity, and the results are compared with the integral equation method.

2.
J Opt Soc Am A Opt Image Sci Vis ; 34(3): 395-409, 2017 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28248366

ABSTRACT

A theoretical investigation of energy conservation, reflectivity, and emissivity in the scattering of electromagnetic waves from 3D multilayer media with random rough interfaces using the second-order small perturbation method (SPM2) is presented. The approach is based on the extinction theorem and develops integral equations for surface fields in the spectral domain. Using the SPM2, we calculate the scattered and transmitted coherent fields and incoherent fields. Reflected and transmitted powers are then found in the form of 2D integrations over wavenumber in the spectral domain. In the integrand, there is a summation over the spectral densities of each of the rough interfaces with each weighted by a corresponding kernel function. We show in this paper that there exists a "strong" condition of energy conservation in that the kernel functions multiplying the spectral density of each interface obey energy conservation exactly. This means that energy is conserved independent of the roughness spectral densities of the rough surfaces. Results of this strong condition are illustrated numerically for up to 50 rough interfaces without requiring specification of surface roughness properties. Two examples are illustrated. One is a multilayer configuration having weak contrasts between adjacent layers, random layer thicknesses, and randomly generated permittivity profiles. The second example is a photonic crystal of periodically alternating permittivities of larger dielectric contrast. The methodology is applied to study the effect of roughness on the brightness temperatures of the Antarctic ice sheet, which is characterized by layers of ice with permittivity fluctuations in addition to random rough interfaces. The results show that the influence of roughness can significantly increase horizontally polarized thermal emission while leaving vertically polarized emissions relatively unaffected.

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