NASDMay 9, 2017

On the eigenmodes of periodic orbits for multiple scattering problems in 2D

arXiv:1705.03342v21 citations
AI Analysis

This work addresses computational bottlenecks in wave propagation and acoustic scattering for applications like physics and engineering, though it is incremental as it builds on existing ray tracing methods.

The paper tackles the computational complexity of high-frequency multiple scattering problems by deriving an asymptotic approximation of the equilibrium phases in periodic orbits, enabling frequency-independent acceleration of ray tracing schemes after a few initial iterations.

Wave propagation and acoustic scattering problems require vast computational resources to be solved accurately at high frequencies. Asymptotic methods can make this cost potentially frequency independent by explicitly extracting the oscillatory properties of the solution. However, the high-frequency wave pattern becomes very complicated in the presence of multiple scattering obstacles. We consider a boundary integral equation formulation of the Helmholtz equation in two dimensions involving several obstacles, for which ray tracing schemes have been previously proposed. The existing analysis of ray tracing schemes focuses on periodic orbits between a subset of the obstacles. One observes that the densities on each of the obstacles converge to an equilibrium after a few iterations. In this paper we present an asymptotic approximation of the phases of those densities in equilibrium, in the form of a Taylor series. The densities represent a full cycle of reflections in a periodic orbit. We initially exploit symmetry in the case of two circular scatterers, but also provide an explicit algorithm for an arbitrary number of general 2D obstacles. The coefficients, as well as the time to compute them, are independent of the wavenumber and of the incident wave. The results may be used to accelerate ray tracing schemes after a small number of initial iterations.

Code Implementations1 repo
Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes