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This paper presents a simple Fourier-matching method to rigorously study resonance frequencies of a sound-hard slab with a finite number of arbitrarily shaped cylindrical holes of diameter ${cal O}(h)$ for $hll1$. Outside the holes, a sound field can be expressed in terms of its normal derivatives on the apertures of holes. Inside each hole, since the vertical variable can be separated, the field can be expressed in terms of a countable set of Fourier basis functions. Matching the field on each aperture yields a linear system of countable equations in terms of a countable set of unknown Fourier coefficients. The linear system can be reduced to a finite-dimensional linear system based on the invertibility of its principal submatrix, which is proved by the well-posedness of a closely related boundary value problem for each hole in the limiting case $hto 0$, so that only the leading Fourier coefficient of each hole is preserved in the finite-dimensional system. The resonance frequencies are those making the resulting finite-dimensional linear system rank deficient. By regular asymptotic analysis for $h ll 1$, we get a systematic asymptotic formula for characterizing the resonance frequencies by the 3D subwavelength structure. The formula reveals an important fact that when all holes are of the same shape, the Q-factor for any resonance frequency asymptotically behaves as ${cal O}(h^{-2})$ for $hll1$ with its prefactor independent of shapes of holes.
This paper proposes a novel, rigorous and simple Fourier-transformation approach to study resonances in a perfectly conducting slab with finite number of subwavelength slits of width $hll 1$. Since regions outside the slits are variable separated, by
We are interested in a time harmonic acoustic problem in a waveguide with locally perturbed sound hard walls. We consider a setting where an observer generates incident plane waves at $-infty$ and probes the resulting scattered field at $-infty$ and
Decorated membrane, comprising a thin layer of elastic film with small rigid platelets fixed on top, has been found to be an efficient absorber of low frequency sound. In this work we consider the problem of sound absorption from a perspective aimed
We report on a novel phenomenon of the resonance effect of primordial density perturbations arisen from a sound speed parameter with an oscillatory behavior, which can generically lead to the formation of primordial black holes in the early Universe.
Large optimization problems with hard constraints arise in many settings, yet classical solvers are often prohibitively slow, motivating the use of deep networks as cheap approximate solvers. Unfortunately, naive deep learning approaches typically ca