ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
We have developed a new fully anisotropic 3D FDTD Maxwell solver for arbitrary electrically and magnetically anisotropic media for piecewise constant electric and magnetic materials that are co-located over the primary computational cells. Two numerical methods were developed that are called non-averaged and averaged methods, respectively. The non-averaged method is first order accurate, while the averaged method is second order accurate for smoothly-varying materials and reduces to first order for discontinuous material distributions. For the standard FDTD field locations with the co-location of the electric and magnetic materials at the primary computational cells, the averaged method require development of the different inversion algorithms of the constitutive relations for the electric and magnetic fields. We provide a mathematically rigorous stability proof followed by extensive numerical testing that includes long-time integration, eigenvalue analysis, tests with extreme, randomly placed material parameters, and various boundary conditions. For accuracy evaluation we have constructed a test case with an explicit analytic solution. Using transformation optics, we have constructed complex, spatially inhomogeneous geometrical object with fully anisotropic materials and a large dynamic range of $underline{epsilon}$ and $underline{mu}$, such that a plane wave incident on the object is perfectly reconstructed downstream. In our implementation, the considerable increase in accuracy of the averaged method only increases the computational run time by 20%.
Discontinuous Petrov Galerkin (DPG) methods are made easily implementable using `broken test spaces, i.e., spaces of functions with no continuity constraints across mesh element interfaces. Broken spaces derivable from a standard exact sequence of fi
A more accurate, stable, finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) algorithm is developed for simulating Maxwells equations with isotropic or anisotropic dielectric materials. This algorithm is in many cases more accurate than previous algorithms (G. R. W
We propose an energy-stable parametric finite element method (ES-PFEM) to discretize the motion of a closed curve under surface diffusion with an anisotropic surface energy $gamma(theta)$ -- anisotropic surface diffusion -- in two dimensions, while $
We develop a geometrically intrinsic formulation of the arbitrary-order Virtual Element Method (VEM) on polygonal cells for the numerical solution of elliptic surface partial differential equations (PDEs). The PDE is first written in covariant form u
We present a methodology to construct efficient high-order in time accurate numerical schemes for a class of gradient flows with appropriate Lipschitz continuous nonlinearity. There are several ingredients to the strategy: the exponential time differ