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Spacetime triangle diagram technique

In physics and mathematics, the spacetime triangle diagram (STTD) technique, also known as the Smirnov method of incomplete separation of variables, is the direct space-time domain method for electromagnetic and scalar wave motion.

Basic stages edit

  1. (Electromagnetics) The system of Maxwell's equations is reduced to a second-order PDE for the field components, or potentials, or their derivatives.
  2. The spatial variables are separated using convenient expansions into series and/or integral transforms—except one that remains bounded with the time variable, resulting in a PDE of hyperbolic type.
  3. The resulting hyperbolic PDE and the simultaneously transformed initial conditions compose a problem, which is solved using the Riemann–Volterra integral formula. This yields the generic solution expressed via a double integral over a triangle domain in the bounded-coordinate—time space. Then this domain is replaced by a more complicated but smaller one, in which the integrant is essentially nonzero, found using a strictly formalized procedure involving specific spacetime triangle diagrams (see, e.g., Refs.[1][2][3]).
  4. In the majority of cases the obtained solutions, being multiplied by known functions of the previously separated variables, result in the expressions of a clear physical meaning (nonsteady-state modes). In many cases, however, more explicit solutions can be found summing up the expansions or doing the inverse integral transform.

STTD versus Green's function technique edit

The STTD technique belongs to the second among the two principal ansätze for theoretical treatment of waves — the frequency domain and the direct spacetime domain. The most well-established method for the inhomogeneous (source-related) descriptive equations of wave motion is one based on the Green's function technique.[4] For the circumstances described in Section 6.4 and Chapter 14 of Jackson's Classical Electrodynamics,[4] it can be reduced to calculation of the wave field via retarded potentials (in particular, the Liénard–Wiechert potentials).

Despite certain similarity between Green's and Riemann–Volterra methods (in some literature the Riemann function is called the Riemann–Green function [5]), their application to the problems of wave motion results in distinct situations:

  • The definitions of both Green's function and corresponding Green's solution are not unique as they leave room for addition of arbitrary solution of the homogeneous equation; in some circumstances the particular choice of Green's function and the final solution are defined by boundary condition(s) or plausibility and physical admissibility of the constructed wavefunctions.[6] The Riemann function is a solution of the homogeneous equation that additionally must take a certain value at the characteristics and thus is defined in a unique way.
  • In contrast to Green's method that provides a particular solution of the inhomogeneous equation, the Riemann–Volterra method is related to the corresponding problem, comprising the PDE and initial conditions,

[7][8] and it was the Riemann–Volterra representation that Smirnov used in his Course of Higher Mathematics to prove the uniqueness of the solution to the above problem (see,[8] item 143).

  • In the general case, Green's formula implies integration over the entire domain of variation of coordinates and time, while integration in the Riemann–Volterra solution is carried out within a limited triangle region, assuring the boundness of the solution support.
  • Causality of the (unique) Riemann–Volterra solution is provided automatically, without need to recur to additional considerations, such as the retarded nature of the argument, wave propagation in certain direction, specific choice of the integration path, etc. (Usually the descriptive equations, such as the classical scalar wave equation, possess the T-symmetry. It is the time-asymmetric initial conditions that define the arrow of time through the limitation of the integration domain in the Riemann formula to  , see more in[2] and a particular example given below.)
  • Green's function can be readily derived from the Liénard–Wiechert potential of a moving point source, but concrete calculation of the wavefunction, inevitably involving the analysis of the retarded argument, may develop in a rather complicated task unless some special techniques, like the parametric method,[9]

are invoked. The Riemann-Volterra approach presents the same or even more serious difficulties, especially when one deals with the bounded-support sources: here the actual limits of integration must be defined from the system of inequalities involving the space-time variables and parameters of the source term. However, this definition can be strictly formalized using the spacetime triangle diagrams. Playing the same role as the Feynman diagrams in particle physics, STTDs provide a strict and illustrative procedure for definition of areas with the same analytic representation of the integration domain in the 2D space spanned by the non-separated spatial variable and time.

Drawbacks of the method edit

  • The method can only be applied to problems possessing known Riemann function.
  • Application of the method and analysis of the results obtained require more profound knowledge of the special functions of mathematical physics (e.g., operating with the generalized functions, Mathieu functions of different kinds and Lommel's functions of two variables) than Green's function method.
  • In some cases the final integrals require special consideration in the domains of rapid oscillation of the Riemann function.

Most important concretizations edit

General considerations edit

Several efficient methods for scalarizing electromagnetic problems in the orthogonal coordinates   were discussed by Borisov in Ref.[10] The most important conditions of their applicability are   and  , where   are the metric (Lamé) coefficients (so that the squared length element is  ). Remarkably, this condition is met for the majority of practically important coordinate systems, including the Cartesian, general-type cylindrical and spherical ones.

For the problems of wave motion is free space, the basic method of separating spatial variables is the application of integral transforms, while for the problems of wave generation and propagation in the guiding systems the variables are usually separated using expansions in terms of the basic functions (modes) meeting the required boundary conditions at the surface of the guiding system.

Cartesian and cylindrical coordinates edit

In the Cartesian   and general-type cylindrical coordinates   separation of the spatial variables result in the initial value problem for a hyperbolic PDE known as the 1D Klein–Gordon equation (KGE)

 

Here   is the time variable expressed in units of length using some characteristic velocity (e.g., speed of light or sound),   is a constant originated from the separation of variables, and   represents a part of the source term in the initial wave equation that remains after application of the variable-separation procedures (a series coefficient or a result of an integral transform).

The above problem possesses known Riemann function

 

where   is the Bessel function of the first kind of order zero.

 
Canonical variables ξ, η.
 
Initial variables z, τ.
The simplest STTD representing a triangle integration domain resulted from the Riemann–Volterra integral formula.

Passing to the canonical variables   one gets the simplest STTD diagram reflecting straightforward application of the Riemann–Volterra method,[7][8] with the fundamental integration domain represented by spacetime triangle MPQ (in dark grey).

Rotation of the STTD 45° counter clockwise yields more common form of the STTD in the conventional spacetime  .

For the homogeneous initial conditions the (unique[8]) solution of the problem is given by the Riemann formula

 

Evolution of the wave process can be traced using a fixed observation point ( ) successively increasing the triangle height ( ) or, alternatively, taking "momentary picture" of the wavefunction   by shifting the spacetime triangle along the   axis ( ).

More useful and sophisticated STTDs correspond to pulsed sources whose support is limited in spacetime. Each limitation produce specific modifications in the STTD, resulting to smaller and more complicated integration domains in which the integrand is essentially non-zero. Examples of most common modifications and their combined actions are illustrated below.

Static limitations to the source area[10]
 
STTD for a source limited from left by plane  , i.e.  , which is the case, e.g., for a travelling source propagating along a semi-infinite radiator  .
 
STTD for a source limited from right by plane  , i.e.  
 
STTD for a source limited from both sides, i.e.  , which is the case, e.g., for a travelling source propagating along a radiator of finite length  .
Combined action of limitations of different type, see Refs.[1][10][11][12][13] for details and more complicated examples
 
STTD for a semi-infinite travelling source pulse.
 
STTD for a finite travelling source pulse.
 
STTD for a finite travelling source pulse propagating along a semi-infinite radiator  .
 
A sequence of generic STTDs for a "short", finite source pulse of duration   propagating along a finite radiator   with a constant velocity  .[citation needed] In this case the source can be expressed in the form
 
    where   is the Heaviside step function.
 
The same STTD sequence for a "long" pulse.[citation needed]

Spherical coordinates edit

In the spherical coordinate system — which in view of the General considerations must be represented in the sequence  , assuring   — one can scalarize problems for the transverse electric (TE) or transverse magnetic (TM) waves using the Borgnis functions, Debye potentials or Hertz vectors. Subsequent separation of the angular variables   via expansion of the initial wavefunction   and the source

  in terms of
 

where   is the associated Legendre polynomial of degree   and order  , results in the initial value problem for the hyperbolic Euler–Poisson–Darboux equation[3][10]

 

known to have the Riemann function

 

where   is the (ordinary) Legendre polynomial of degree  .

Equivalence of the STTD (Riemann) and Green's function solutions edit

The STTD technique represents an alternative to the classical Green's function method. Due to uniqueness of the solution to the initial value problem in question,[8] in the particular case of zero initial conditions the Riemann solution provided by the STTD technique must coincide with the convolution of the causal Green's function and the source term.

The two methods provide apparently different descriptions of the wavefunction: e.g., the Riemann function to the Klein–Gordon problem is a Bessel function (which must be integrated, together with the source term, over the restricted area represented by the fundamental triangle MPQ) while the retarded Green's function to the Klein–Gordon equation is a Fourier transform of the imaginary exponential term (to be integrated over the entire plane  , see, for example, Sec. 3.1. of Ref.[14] ) reducible to

 

Extending integration with respect to   to the complex domain, using the residue theorem (with the poles   chosen as   to satisfy the causality conditions) one gets

 

Using formula 3.876-1 of Gradshteyn and Ryzhik,[15]

 

the last Green's function representation reduces to the expression[16]

 

in which 1/2 is the scaling factor of the Riemann formula and   the Riemann function, while the Heaviside step function   reduces, for  , the area of integration to the fundamental triangle MPQ, making the Green's function solution equal to that provided by the STTD technique.

References and notes edit

  1. ^ a b A.B. Utkin, Localized Waves Emanated by Pulsed Sources: The Riemann–Volterra Approach. In: Hugo E. Hernández-Figueroa, Erasmo Recami, and Michel Zamboni-Rached (eds.) Non-diffracting Waves. Wiley-VCH: Berlin, ISBN 978-3-527-41195-5, pp. 287–306 (2013)
  2. ^ a b A.B. Utkin, The Riemann–Volterra time-domain technique for waveguides: A case study for elliptic geometry. Wave Motion 49(2), 347–363 (2012), doi: 10.1016/j.wavemoti.2011.12.001
  3. ^ a b V.V. Borisov, A.V. Manankova, A.B. Utkin, Spherical harmonic representation of the electromagnetic field produced by a moving pulse of current density, Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and General 29(15), 4493–4514 (1996), doi: 10.1088/0305-4470/29/15/020
  4. ^ a b J. D. Jackson, Classical Electrodynamics, 3rd ed., Wiley, New York (1999)
  5. ^ see, e.g., G. A. Korn and T. M. Korn, Mathematical Handbook for Scientists and Engineers, Courier Dover Publications, New York (2000)
  6. ^ A comprehensive discussion of this subject can found in H. Kleinert, Path Integrals in Quantum Mechanics, Statistics, Polymer Physics, and Financial Markets, 5th ed., World Scientific, Singapore (2009)
  7. ^ a b R. Courant and D. Hilbert, Methods of Mathematical Physics, Vol. 2, Wiley, New York (1989)
  8. ^ a b c d e V.I. Smirnov, A Course of Higher Mathematics, Vol. 4: Integral Equations and Partial Differential Equations, Pergamon Press, Oxford (1964)
  9. ^ C.J. Chapman, The spiral Green function in acoustics and electromagnetism, Proc. Roy. Soc. A 431(1881), 157–167 (1990), doi: 10.1098/rspa.1990.0124
  10. ^ a b c d V.V. Borisov, Electromagnetic Fields of Transient Currents. Leningrad State University Press: Leningrad (1996, in Russian)
  11. ^ V.V. Borisov and A.B. Utkin, The transient electromagnetic field produced by a moving pulse of line current, Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics 28(4), 614-622 (1995), doi: 10.1088/0022-3727/28/4/003
  12. ^ A.B. Utkin, Droplet-shaped waves: casual finite-support analogs of X-shaped waves, J. Opt. Soc. Am. A 29(4), 457-462 (2012), doi: 10.1364/JOSAA.29.000457
  13. ^ A.B. Utkin, Droplet-shape wave produced by line macroscopic current pulse of finite length, IEEE Xplore DD-2013, ISBN 978-1-4799-1037-3, 145–150 (2013), doi: 10.1109/DD.2013.6712820
  14. ^ W. Geyi, A time-domain theory of waveguide, Progress in Electromagnetics Research 59, 267–297 (2006), doi: 10.2528/PIER05102102
  15. ^ Gradshteyn, Izrail Solomonovich; Ryzhik, Iosif Moiseevich; Geronimus, Yuri Veniaminovich; Tseytlin, Michail Yulyevich; Jeffrey, Alan (2015) [October 2014]. "3.876.". In Zwillinger, Daniel; Moll, Victor Hugo (eds.). Table of Integrals, Series, and Products. Translated by Scripta Technica, Inc. (8th ed.). Academic Press, Inc. p. 486. ISBN 978-0-12-384933-5. LCCN 2014010276.
  16. ^ Apparently this result was first published by Geyi (2006: 275), merely as a way to simplify the Green's solution and reduce the domain of integration.
  • V.V. Borisov, N.M. Reutova, A.B. Utkin, Electromagnetic waves produced by a travelling current pulse with high-frequency filling. Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and General, 38(10), 2225–2240 (2005), doi: 10.1088/0305-4470/38/10/012
  • V.V. Borisov, Nonsteady-State Electromagnetic Waves. Leningrad: Leningrad State University Press: Leningrad (1987, in Russian)

spacetime, triangle, diagram, technique, physics, mathematics, spacetime, triangle, diagram, sttd, technique, also, known, smirnov, method, incomplete, separation, variables, direct, space, time, domain, method, electromagnetic, scalar, wave, motion, contents,. In physics and mathematics the spacetime triangle diagram STTD technique also known as the Smirnov method of incomplete separation of variables is the direct space time domain method for electromagnetic and scalar wave motion Contents 1 Basic stages 2 STTD versus Green s function technique 3 Drawbacks of the method 4 Most important concretizations 4 1 General considerations 4 2 Cartesian and cylindrical coordinates 4 3 Spherical coordinates 5 Equivalence of the STTD Riemann and Green s function solutions 6 References and notesBasic stages edit Electromagnetics The system of Maxwell s equations is reduced to a second order PDE for the field components or potentials or their derivatives The spatial variables are separated using convenient expansions into series and or integral transforms except one that remains bounded with the time variable resulting in a PDE of hyperbolic type The resulting hyperbolic PDE and the simultaneously transformed initial conditions compose a problem which is solved using the Riemann Volterra integral formula This yields the generic solution expressed via a double integral over a triangle domain in the bounded coordinate time space Then this domain is replaced by a more complicated but smaller one in which the integrant is essentially nonzero found using a strictly formalized procedure involving specific spacetime triangle diagrams see e g Refs 1 2 3 In the majority of cases the obtained solutions being multiplied by known functions of the previously separated variables result in the expressions of a clear physical meaning nonsteady state modes In many cases however more explicit solutions can be found summing up the expansions or doing the inverse integral transform STTD versus Green s function technique editThe STTD technique belongs to the second among the two principal ansatze for theoretical treatment of waves the frequency domain and the direct spacetime domain The most well established method for the inhomogeneous source related descriptive equations of wave motion is one based on the Green s function technique 4 For the circumstances described in Section 6 4 and Chapter 14 of Jackson s Classical Electrodynamics 4 it can be reduced to calculation of the wave field via retarded potentials in particular the Lienard Wiechert potentials Despite certain similarity between Green s and Riemann Volterra methods in some literature the Riemann function is called the Riemann Green function 5 their application to the problems of wave motion results in distinct situations The definitions of both Green s function and corresponding Green s solution are not unique as they leave room for addition of arbitrary solution of the homogeneous equation in some circumstances the particular choice of Green s function and the final solution are defined by boundary condition s or plausibility and physical admissibility of the constructed wavefunctions 6 The Riemann function is a solution of the homogeneous equation that additionally must take a certain value at the characteristics and thus is defined in a unique way In contrast to Green s method that provides a particular solution of the inhomogeneous equation the Riemann Volterra method is related to the corresponding problem comprising the PDE and initial conditions 7 8 and it was the Riemann Volterra representation that Smirnov used in his Course of Higher Mathematics to prove the uniqueness of the solution to the above problem see 8 item 143 In the general case Green s formula implies integration over the entire domain of variation of coordinates and time while integration in the Riemann Volterra solution is carried out within a limited triangle region assuring the boundness of the solution support Causality of the unique Riemann Volterra solution is provided automatically without need to recur to additional considerations such as the retarded nature of the argument wave propagation in certain direction specific choice of the integration path etc Usually the descriptive equations such as the classical scalar wave equation possess the T symmetry It is the time asymmetric initial conditions that define the arrow of time through the limitation of the integration domain in the Riemann formula to t gt 0 displaystyle t gt 0 nbsp see more in 2 and a particular example given below Green s function can be readily derived from the Lienard Wiechert potential of a moving point source but concrete calculation of the wavefunction inevitably involving the analysis of the retarded argument may develop in a rather complicated task unless some special techniques like the parametric method 9 are invoked The Riemann Volterra approach presents the same or even more serious difficulties especially when one deals with the bounded support sources here the actual limits of integration must be defined from the system of inequalities involving the space time variables and parameters of the source term However this definition can be strictly formalized using the spacetime triangle diagrams Playing the same role as the Feynman diagrams in particle physics STTDs provide a strict and illustrative procedure for definition of areas with the same analytic representation of the integration domain in the 2D space spanned by the non separated spatial variable and time Drawbacks of the method editThe method can only be applied to problems possessing known Riemann function Application of the method and analysis of the results obtained require more profound knowledge of the special functions of mathematical physics e g operating with the generalized functions Mathieu functions of different kinds and Lommel s functions of two variables than Green s function method In some cases the final integrals require special consideration in the domains of rapid oscillation of the Riemann function Most important concretizations editGeneral considerations edit Several efficient methods for scalarizing electromagnetic problems in the orthogonal coordinates x 1 x 2 x 3 displaystyle x 1 x 2 x 3 nbsp were discussed by Borisov in Ref 10 The most important conditions of their applicability are h 3 1 displaystyle h 3 1 nbsp and 3 h 1 h 2 0 displaystyle partial 3 h 1 h 2 0 nbsp where h i i 1 2 3 displaystyle h i i 1 2 3 nbsp are the metric Lame coefficients so that the squared length element is d s 2 h 1 2 d x 1 2 h 2 2 d x 2 2 h 3 2 d x 3 2 displaystyle ds 2 h 1 2 dx 1 2 h 2 2 dx 2 2 h 3 2 dx 3 2 nbsp Remarkably this condition is met for the majority of practically important coordinate systems including the Cartesian general type cylindrical and spherical ones For the problems of wave motion is free space the basic method of separating spatial variables is the application of integral transforms while for the problems of wave generation and propagation in the guiding systems the variables are usually separated using expansions in terms of the basic functions modes meeting the required boundary conditions at the surface of the guiding system Cartesian and cylindrical coordinates edit In the Cartesian x 1 x x 2 y x 3 z displaystyle left x 1 x x 2 y x 3 z right nbsp and general type cylindrical coordinates x 1 x 1 x y x 2 x 2 x y x 3 z displaystyle left x 1 x 1 x y x 2 x 2 x y x 3 z right nbsp separation of the spatial variables result in the initial value problem for a hyperbolic PDE known as the 1D Klein Gordon equation KGE t 2 z 2 k 2 ps t z f t z ps t z 0 for t lt 0 displaystyle begin aligned amp left partial tau 2 partial z 2 k 2 right psi tau z f tau z amp psi tau z 0 text for tau lt 0 end aligned nbsp Here t displaystyle tau nbsp is the time variable expressed in units of length using some characteristic velocity e g speed of light or sound k displaystyle k nbsp is a constant originated from the separation of variables and f t z displaystyle f tau z nbsp represents a part of the source term in the initial wave equation that remains after application of the variable separation procedures a series coefficient or a result of an integral transform The above problem possesses known Riemann function R k t z t z J 0 k t t 2 z z 2 displaystyle R k tau z tau z J 0 left k sqrt tau tau 2 z z 2 right nbsp where J 0 displaystyle J 0 cdot nbsp is the Bessel function of the first kind of order zero nbsp Canonical variables 3 h nbsp Initial variables z t The simplest STTD representing a triangle integration domain resulted from the Riemann Volterra integral formula Passing to the canonical variables z t 3 h displaystyle z tau to xi eta nbsp one gets the simplest STTD diagram reflecting straightforward application of the Riemann Volterra method 7 8 with the fundamental integration domain represented by spacetime triangle MPQ in dark grey Rotation of the STTD 45 counter clockwise yields more common form of the STTD in the conventional spacetime z t displaystyle z tau nbsp For the homogeneous initial conditions the unique 8 solution of the problem is given by the Riemann formula ps t z 1 2 M P Q d t d z R t z t z f t z displaystyle psi tau z frac 1 2 iint limits triangle MPQ d tau dz R tau z tau z f tau z nbsp Evolution of the wave process can be traced using a fixed observation point z const displaystyle z text const nbsp successively increasing the triangle height t displaystyle tau nbsp or alternatively taking momentary picture of the wavefunction ps displaystyle psi nbsp by shifting the spacetime triangle along the z displaystyle z nbsp axis t const displaystyle tau text const nbsp More useful and sophisticated STTDs correspond to pulsed sources whose support is limited in spacetime Each limitation produce specific modifications in the STTD resulting to smaller and more complicated integration domains in which the integrand is essentially non zero Examples of most common modifications and their combined actions are illustrated below Static limitations to the source area 10 nbsp STTD for a source limited from left by plane z 0 displaystyle z 0 nbsp i e f t z 0 for z lt 0 displaystyle f tau z 0 text for z lt 0 nbsp which is the case e g for a travelling source propagating along a semi infinite radiator l displaystyle l nbsp nbsp STTD for a source limited from right by plane z l displaystyle z l nbsp i e f t z 0 for z gt l displaystyle f tau z 0 text for z gt l nbsp nbsp STTD for a source limited from both sides i e f t z 0 for z 0 l displaystyle f tau z 0 text for z notin 0 l nbsp which is the case e g for a travelling source propagating along a radiator of finite length l displaystyle l nbsp Combined action of limitations of different type see Refs 1 10 11 12 13 for details and more complicated examples nbsp STTD for a semi infinite travelling source pulse nbsp STTD for a finite travelling source pulse nbsp STTD for a finite travelling source pulse propagating along a semi infinite radiator z 0 displaystyle z in left 0 infty right nbsp nbsp A sequence of generic STTDs for a short finite source pulse of duration T displaystyle T nbsp propagating along a finite radiator z 0 l displaystyle z in 0 l nbsp with a constant velocity b displaystyle beta nbsp citation needed In this case the source can be expressed in the form f t z f 0 t z h z h l z h t z b h T t z b displaystyle f tau z f 0 tau z times h z h l z h left tau frac z beta right h left T tau frac z beta right nbsp where h displaystyle h cdot nbsp is the Heaviside step function nbsp The same STTD sequence for a long pulse citation needed Spherical coordinates edit In the spherical coordinate system which in view of the General considerations must be represented in the sequence x 1 8 x 2 f x 3 r displaystyle left x 1 theta x 2 varphi x 3 r right nbsp assuring h 3 1 displaystyle h 3 1 nbsp one can scalarize problems for the transverse electric TE or transverse magnetic TM waves using the Borgnis functions Debye potentials or Hertz vectors Subsequent separation of the angular variables 8 f displaystyle theta varphi nbsp via expansion of the initial wavefunction ps t 8 f r displaystyle psi left tau theta varphi r right nbsp and the source f t 8 f r displaystyle f left tau theta varphi r right nbsp in terms of sin m f cos m f P n m cos 8 displaystyle left begin array c sin m varphi cos m varphi end array right P n m cos theta nbsp where P n m displaystyle P n m left cdot right nbsp is the associated Legendre polynomial of degree n displaystyle n nbsp and order m displaystyle m nbsp results in the initial value problem for the hyperbolic Euler Poisson Darboux equation 3 10 t 2 r 2 n n 1 r 2 ps n m t r f n m t r ps n m t r 0 for t lt 0 displaystyle begin aligned amp left partial tau 2 partial r 2 frac n n 1 r 2 right psi nm tau r f nm tau r amp psi nm tau r 0 text for tau lt 0 end aligned nbsp known to have the Riemann function R t r t r P n r 2 r 2 t t 2 2 r r displaystyle R tau r tau r P n left frac r 2 r 2 tau tau 2 2rr right nbsp where P n displaystyle P n left cdot right nbsp is the ordinary Legendre polynomial of degree n displaystyle n nbsp Equivalence of the STTD Riemann and Green s function solutions editThe STTD technique represents an alternative to the classical Green s function method Due to uniqueness of the solution to the initial value problem in question 8 in the particular case of zero initial conditions the Riemann solution provided by the STTD technique must coincide with the convolution of the causal Green s function and the source term The two methods provide apparently different descriptions of the wavefunction e g the Riemann function to the Klein Gordon problem is a Bessel function which must be integrated together with the source term over the restricted area represented by the fundamental triangle MPQ while the retarded Green s function to the Klein Gordon equation is a Fourier transform of the imaginary exponential term to be integrated over the entire plane z t displaystyle z tau nbsp see for example Sec 3 1 of Ref 14 reducible to G k t z t z 1 2 p 2 d p e i p z z d W e i W t t W 2 p 2 k 2 displaystyle G k tau z tau z frac 1 2 pi 2 int limits infty infty dp rm e ip z z int limits infty infty d Omega frac rm e i Omega tau tau Omega 2 p 2 k 2 nbsp Extending integration with respect to W displaystyle Omega nbsp to the complex domain using the residue theorem with the poles W 1 2 displaystyle Omega 1 2 nbsp chosen as lim e 0 p 2 k 2 i e displaystyle lim varepsilon to 0 left pm sqrt p 2 k 2 i varepsilon right nbsp to satisfy the causality conditions one gets G k t z t z 1 p 0 d p sin t t p 2 k 2 p 2 k 2 cos p z z displaystyle G k tau z tau z frac 1 pi int limits 0 infty dp frac sin left tau tau sqrt p 2 k 2 right sqrt p 2 k 2 cos p z z nbsp Using formula 3 876 1 of Gradshteyn and Ryzhik 15 0 d x sin p x 2 a 2 x 2 a 2 cos b x p 2 J 0 a p 2 b 2 for 0 lt b lt p 0 for b gt p gt 0 a gt 0 displaystyle int limits 0 infty dx frac sin p sqrt x 2 a 2 sqrt x 2 a 2 cos bx left begin aligned amp frac pi 2 J 0 a sqrt p 2 b 2 amp text for amp 0 lt b lt p amp 0 amp text for amp b gt p gt 0 end aligned right qquad a gt 0 nbsp the last Green s function representation reduces to the expression 16 1 2 J 0 k t t 2 z z 2 h t t z z displaystyle frac 1 2 J 0 left k sqrt tau tau 2 z z 2 right h tau tau z z nbsp in which 1 2 is the scaling factor of the Riemann formula and J 0 displaystyle J 0 cdot nbsp the Riemann function while the Heaviside step function h displaystyle h cdot nbsp reduces for t gt 0 displaystyle tau gt 0 nbsp the area of integration to the fundamental triangle MPQ making the Green s function solution equal to that provided by the STTD technique References and notes edit a b A B Utkin Localized Waves Emanated by Pulsed Sources The Riemann Volterra Approach In Hugo E Hernandez Figueroa Erasmo Recami and Michel Zamboni Rached eds Non diffracting Waves Wiley VCH Berlin ISBN 978 3 527 41195 5 pp 287 306 2013 a b A B Utkin The Riemann Volterra time domain technique for waveguides A case study for elliptic geometry Wave Motion 49 2 347 363 2012 doi 10 1016 j wavemoti 2011 12 001 a b V V Borisov A V Manankova A B Utkin Spherical harmonic representation of the electromagnetic field produced by a moving pulse of current density Journal of Physics A Mathematical and General 29 15 4493 4514 1996 doi 10 1088 0305 4470 29 15 020 a b J D Jackson Classical Electrodynamics 3rd ed Wiley New York 1999 see e g G A Korn and T M Korn Mathematical Handbook for Scientists and Engineers Courier Dover Publications New York 2000 A comprehensive discussion of this subject can found in H Kleinert Path Integrals in Quantum Mechanics Statistics Polymer Physics and Financial Markets 5th ed World Scientific Singapore 2009 a b R Courant and D Hilbert Methods of Mathematical Physics Vol 2 Wiley New York 1989 a b c d e V I Smirnov A Course of Higher Mathematics Vol 4 Integral Equations and Partial Differential Equations Pergamon Press Oxford 1964 C J Chapman The spiral Green function in acoustics and electromagnetism Proc Roy Soc A 431 1881 157 167 1990 doi 10 1098 rspa 1990 0124 a b c d V V Borisov Electromagnetic Fields of Transient Currents Leningrad State University Press Leningrad 1996 in Russian V V Borisov and A B Utkin The transient electromagnetic field produced by a moving pulse of line current Journal of Physics D Applied Physics 28 4 614 622 1995 doi 10 1088 0022 3727 28 4 003 A B Utkin Droplet shaped waves casual finite support analogs of X shaped waves J Opt Soc Am A 29 4 457 462 2012 doi 10 1364 JOSAA 29 000457 A B Utkin Droplet shape wave produced by line macroscopic current pulse of finite length IEEE Xplore DD 2013 ISBN 978 1 4799 1037 3 145 150 2013 doi 10 1109 DD 2013 6712820 W Geyi A time domain theory of waveguide Progress in Electromagnetics Research 59 267 297 2006 doi 10 2528 PIER05102102 Gradshteyn Izrail Solomonovich Ryzhik Iosif Moiseevich Geronimus Yuri Veniaminovich Tseytlin Michail Yulyevich Jeffrey Alan 2015 October 2014 3 876 In Zwillinger Daniel Moll Victor Hugo eds Table of Integrals Series and Products Translated by Scripta Technica Inc 8th ed Academic Press Inc p 486 ISBN 978 0 12 384933 5 LCCN 2014010276 Apparently this result was first published by Geyi 2006 275 merely as a way to simplify the Green s solution and reduce the domain of integration V V Borisov N M Reutova A B Utkin Electromagnetic waves produced by a travelling current pulse with high frequency filling Journal of Physics A Mathematical and General 38 10 2225 2240 2005 doi 10 1088 0305 4470 38 10 012 V V Borisov Nonsteady State Electromagnetic Waves Leningrad Leningrad State University Press Leningrad 1987 in Russian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Spacetime triangle diagram technique amp oldid 1144913367, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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