Publication | Closed Access
On lateral waves in slab configurations and their relation to other wave types
38
Citations
5
References
1965
Year
EngineeringWave MotionSlab ConfigurationsElectromagnetic CompatibilityWave TheoryComputational ElectromagneticsDiffraction EffectsLateral WavesElectromagnetic WaveOcean Wave MechanicsPhysicsWave PropagationAntennaDiffractionCustomary AnalysisDielectric SlabWave GroupApplied PhysicsWave ScatteringInternal WavesOther Wave Types
The customary analysis of radiation from sources in the presence of a dielectric slab involves a plane-wave superposition wherein the boundary conditions are satisfied by a single composite reflection coefficient. The far field is then comprised of the incident and reflected waves as well as a diffracted contribution of surface and leaky waves (pole waves). An alternative formulation is discussed wherein the interface effects are accounted for one at a time and the resulting diffraction field is then shown to involve lateral waves (branch-cut waves). The two representations are compared and their respective utility is illustrated by examples. When the source and observation points are located exterior to a large dielectric gap, diffraction effects due to an accumulation of leaky waves are found to be equivalent to a single lateral wave. For source and observation points inside a lossy dielectric slab, the pole-wave formulation provides a somewhat more convenient but physically less transparent result than the one comprising lateral waves.
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