Scattering of Electromagnetic Waves by Obstacles - by Gerhard Kristensson (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- This book is an introduction to some of the most important properties of electromagnetic waves and their interaction with passive materials and scatterers.
- Author(s): Gerhard Kristensson
- 760 Pages
- Science, Physics
- Series Name: Electromagnetic Waves
Description
About the Book
This book is an introduction to some of the most important properties of electromagnetic waves and their interaction with passive materials and scatterers.
Book Synopsis
This book is an introduction to some of the most important properties of electromagnetic waves and their interaction with passive materials and scatterers. The main purpose of the book is to give a theoretical treatment of these scattering phenomena, and to illustrate numerical computations of some canonical scattering problems for different geometries and materials. The scattering theory is also important in the theory of passive antennas, and this book gives several examples on this topic.
Topics covered include an introduction to the basic equations used in scattering; the Green functions and dyadics; integral representation of fields; introductory scattering theory; scattering in the time domain; approximations and applications; spherical vector waves; scattering by spherical objects; the null-field approach; and propagation in stratified media.
The book is organised along two tracks, which can be studied separately or together. Track 1 material is appropriate for a first reading of the textbook, while Track 2 contains more advanced material suited for the second reading and for reference. Exercises are included for each chapter.
Review Quotes
'This fundamental (and in many respects encyclopedic) 755-page monograph was published as part of the "Mario Boella Series on Electromagnetism in Information and Communication" edited by P.L.E. Uslenghi. The main purpose of the book is systematic exposition of several important aspects of the electromagnetic scattering theory along with the presentation of the requisite mathematical apparatus and illustrative numerical results. What distinguishes this volume from the vast majority of related books is the extensive treatment of the time-domain scattering theory.'
--Michael I. Mishchenko, NASA Goddard Institute for SpaceStudies, New York, USA