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ING’S College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 SVD methods applied to wire antennae Pelagia Neocleous Kings College London IPAM, Lake Arrowhead Meeting ING’S Overview • Antenna design as an inverse problem • The wire antenna (Background) • Ill-posedness and ill-conditioning of the Pocklington IEFE • Regularization methods commonly used • The singular value decomposition approach • Considerations for improvement of the Pocklington model – Transmission line theory and periodic Green’s functions • Future directions College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 ING’S Background College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 • Antenna design is the inverse problem of finding the structures that give rise to specific far-field radiation patterns. The radiation pattern of a wire antenna can easily be calculated from the current distribution across its length. • Determining the current distribution on a wire given an incident harmonic electromagnetic field is a hard problem with a long history of 90 years. • Analytic solutions are known for the Hertzian dipole and the infinitely long and thin wire, but there is no mathematical theory to provide a solution between the two extremes. • Pocklington in 1907 constructed a family of asymptotic solutions to the infinite thin wire, which approach perfect sinusoids. • Harrington in 1967 proposed a way to solve the integral equation numerically using matrix methods. ING’S Description of the problem College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 •Problem: Determine the charge distribution J(z’) on a metal scatterer, given the incident field Ei(z) on its surface. •The linear operator is derived from solving Maxwell’s equations subject to the boundary condition: where Es(z) is the scattered field. •The resulting Fredholm equation of the first kind is: where K(z,z’) is a linear kernel. ING’S College K LONDON The thin wire Founded I8 2 9 Assumptions: • The tangential component of the electric field at the surface of the wire is zero. • The wire has infinite conductivity. • The current vanishes at the open ends of the conductor. • The radius and • The excitation field source is a generator. . ING’S More on the model College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 • Based on these assumptions a thin linear antenna can be treated as a series of hertzian dipoles of charge density J(z’) , the electromagnetic fields of which, superimpose at any given point in space. • The radiation field is the result of an one-dimensional integration over all the elementary dipoles across the antenna. • The source is modelled as a constant voltage applied on a gap of length at the centre of the wire. Pocklington’s integral field equation ING’S College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 Pocklington’s equation for the thin wire is: where G(z,z’) is the free space Green function: and points. is the distance between the source and the observation ING’S Reduced and Exact kernel Formulation College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 Assume the current is on the wire axis while the boundary conditions are applied on the surface Nearly singular when z z'. The current is modelled as the sum of rings of azimuthally symmetric current density constructing the surface of the wire Has a removable singularity at the origin. ING’S Ill-posedness and ill-conditioning College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 • Pocklington’s equation with the reduced kernel is shown to be ill-posed (Rynne 2000). The integral is a compact operator, hence its inverse is unbounded. • The electric field data do not depend continuously on the solution for the current distribution. • This results to difficulties such as the appearance of rapid oscillations near the driving point when the number or basis functions becomes larger than L/2a. • The accuracy of the solution is limited to a discretization of a mesh size h not smaller than the wire thickness. If h < a an oscillating error is introduced near the endpoints (Fikioris 2002). ING’S Regularization methods College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 • Restrict the solutions to specific Sobolev-type function spaces, defined so that the solution satisfies the smoothness conditions at the endpoints (Rynne 2003) • Numerical methods expanding the solution in appropriate function subspaces – Method of Moments ING’S College K LONDON The method of moments Founded I8 2 9 • Matrix methods for solving linear equations. First generalised and applied to electromagnetism by R.F. Harrington (1967) • As in the moment definition (Moment = Force x Arm), it takes the moments by multiplying with weighting functions and integrating. • Transform the integral equation in a matrix form • Expand g and f in appropriate basis (bn) and weighting functions (wn) such that: • The basis and weighting functions should be linearly independent and chosen so that they can approximate the solution domain f sufficiently well. ING’S Proposed solution: Truncated SVD College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 • Expand solutions in the most information dense orthogonal subspaces • Overcome ill-conditioning by truncation • There are no limits on the number of points representing the integral operator. • Provide information about the noise subspace • The singular vector subspaces only need to be calculated once and used as basis for the expansion of the solution in all applications. ING’S An example of the results College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 ING’S Ill-conditioning dependence on the wire thickness College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 • The singular values drop rapidly as the radius to length ratio increases. • The condition number grows exponentially with the matrix size N and is a rapidly increasing function of of the radius to length ratio. ING’S The real decomposition College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 The problem is simplified by looking at the product of the Pocklington operator K multiplied with its adjoint: K is Hermitian the problem can be solved with just one real SVD. The Pocklington eigen modes ING’S College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 ING’S Problems… College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 • The decomposition is non unique on the complex plane. The analogue of the sign parity in the real case, is translated into a phase parity on the complex 2D plane. • The eigen vectors of the real decomposition and the solution they yield is real. How does that relate to the complex results? • In order to relate the two solutions we need to understand the phase rotations which show how the two subspaces interact. ING’S Polar decomposition and rotation of subspaces • • College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 The mapping of one subspace into another can be studied using polar decomposition. The polar decomposition is given by: where is Hermitian and is positive semidefinite. It is analogous to the complex number factorisation and reveals information on the effect of the transformation to the magnitude and phase of a complex vector. The calculation of the polar factor for both cases, allows mapping from one subspace to the other. ING’S Some concerns about the use Pocklington’s equation College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 • The implication that the currents are point sources along the wire instead of accelerated charges is a poor model for the use of Maxwell’s equations. • Pocklington’s equation is a result of an infinite sinusoidal expansion of the solution to a one dimensional infinitely long perfect conductor. • The reduced kernel implies a dimensional collapse of the cylinder and is a poor approximation to real wires of finite thickness. ING’S Considerations for improvement of the model College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 • Use transmission line theory – Compare the antenna to a lumped wave guide and apply Kirchoff’s electric circuit equations for given input impedances. • Use periodic Green’s function – Surface charge is evaluated on periodic boundary conditions on the rings of the Green’s function. ING’S College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 Transmission Line Theory z Transmission line differential equations dV z ZI z Vin δ z zf dz dI z YV z dz l Vin l where Z and V are the impedance and admittance per unit length. z = zf z=0 ING’S Analytic Expressions College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 • Antenna current on the axis YVin sin β l zf sin β l z , l z zf β sin 2 βl Iz YVin sin β l zf sin β l z , z z l f β sin 2 βl where β β jβ is the complex phase constant. • Far field radiation pattern jωμ e jkr YVin sin θ Eθ θ sin β l zf e jkl cos θ 2 2 2 4π r sin 2 βl β k cos θ sin β l zf e jkl cos θ sin 2 βl e jkzf cos θ ING’S College K LONDON Analytic results Founded I8 2 9 200 Analytical MoM 8 Analytical MoM 150 100 ÐI (deg) |I| (mA) 6 4 50 0 -50 -100 2 -150 0 -0.75 -0.5 -0.25 0 z/ l 0.25 0.5 -200 0.75 -0.75 90 -0.5 800 120 60 600 400 150 -0.25 Analytical MoM 30 200 180 0 210 330 240 300 270 0 z/ l 0.25 0.5 0.75 ING’S Periodic Green’s Function College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 Consider the Green’s function solution for the Helmholtz operator in 2D with doubly periodic boundary conditions: ( 2 2 )G (x, x 0 ) (x x 0 ) G(x e1 , x0 ) G(x, x0 ), G(x e 2 , x0 ) G(x, x0 ), e1 (1,0), e2 (0,1). Due to periodicity we only need to compute G on a fundamental cell B1 {x ( x, y ) 2 x , y , 1 / 2}. B1 B1 , where For any (x, x0 ) B1 B1 G(x, x0 ) G(x x0 ) G(y) with the new variable y 2B1. ING’S Conclusions College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 • Blind application of numerical methods can often give good results, but a thorough understanding of the difficulties associated with the application is needed to determine whether to trust or distrust one’s results. • Both ill-posedness and matrix ill-conditioning need to be carefully considered when solving Pocklington’s equation. • The singular value decomposition approach yields good results for realistic finitely thin wires. • Pocklington’s equation has severe limitations as a model for the finite wire antenna. • The area of antenna design can be benefited from the application of inverse problems methods. ING’S Future Work College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 • Extend the method to more complicated wire structures such as H aerials and Yagi antennas. • Apply the SVD method to linear arrays of dipoles and solve the array design problem by expanding in the appropriate eigen modes. • Use periodic Green functions to extend the results to linear arrays of dipoles. • Ultimate goal of the project is to provide a rigorous method based on electromagnetic theory, for gaining understanding of the mutual coupling between neighbouring elements in radar array design. ING’S College K LONDON Founded I8 2 9 Acknowledgements • Professor E.R. Pike • Dr. D. Chana Kings College London • Dr. G. D. DeVilliers QinetiQ, Malvern • IPAM, UCLA