72 research outputs found
Characteristics of bound modes in coupled dielectric waveguides containing negative index media
We investigate the characteristics of guided wave modes in planar coupled
waveguides. In particular, we calculate the dispersion relations for TM modes
in which one or both of the guiding layers consists of negative index media
(NIM)-where the permittivity and permeability are both negative. We find that
the Poynting vector within the NIM waveguide axis can change sign and
magnitude, a feature that is reflected in the dispersion curves
Mode Bifurcation and Fold Points of Complex Dispersion Curves for the Metamaterial Goubau Line
In this paper the complex dispersion curves of the four lowest-order
transverse magnetic modes of a dielectric Goubau line () are
compared with those of a dispersive metamaterial Goubau line. The vastly
different dispersion curve structure for the metamaterial Goubau line is
characterized by unusual features such as mode bifurcation, complex fold
points, both proper and improper complex modes, and merging of complex and real
modes
Guided Modes of Elliptical Metamaterial Waveguides
The propagation of guided electromagnetic waves in open elliptical
metamaterial waveguide structures is investigated. The waveguide contains a
negative-index media core, where the permittivity, and permeability
are negative over a given bandwidth. The allowed mode spectrum for these
structures is numerically calculated by solving a dispersion relation that is
expressed in terms of Mathieu functions. By probing certain regions of
parameter space, we find the possibility exists to have extremely localized
waves that transmit along the surface of the waveguide
The spectral element method (SEM) on variable-resolution grids: evaluating grid sensitivity and resolution-aware numerical viscosity
We evaluate the performance of the Community Atmosphere Model's
(CAM) spectral element method on variable-resolution grids using the
shallow-water equations in spherical geometry. We configure the
method as it is used in CAM, with dissipation of grid scale variance,
implemented using hyperviscosity. Hyperviscosity is highly scale
selective and grid independent, but does require a resolution-dependent coefficient. For the spectral element method with
variable-resolution grids and highly distorted elements, we obtain
the best results if we introduce a tensor-based hyperviscosity with
tensor coefficients tied to the eigenvalues of the local element
metric tensor. The tensor hyperviscosity is constructed so that, for
regions of uniform resolution, it matches the traditional constant-coefficient hyperviscosity. With the tensor hyperviscosity, the
large-scale solution is almost completely unaffected by the presence
of grid refinement. This later point is important for climate
applications in which long term climatological averages can be
imprinted by stationary inhomogeneities in the truncation
error. We also evaluate the robustness of the approach with respect
to grid quality by considering unstructured conforming quadrilateral
grids generated with a well-known grid-generating toolkit and grids
generated by SQuadGen, a new open source alternative which produces
lower valence nodes
Scattering Representation of Waveguide/Cavity Discontinuities Using Mode-Matching and the Least-Squares Boundary Residual
Focus wave mode solutions of the inhomogeneous<i>n</i>-dimensional scalar wave equation
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