Robert Koslover
Certified Consultant
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Posted:
6 years ago
29 ago 2018, 19:45 GMT-4
Floquet boundary conditions are a way of modeling a single element as if it were part of an infinite array. You are unlikely to be interested in the pattern of a truly infinite array. However, you can compute the pattern contributed by a single element.
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Scientific Applications & Research Associates (SARA) Inc.
www.comsol.com/partners-consultants/certified-consultants/sara
Floquet boundary conditions are a way of modeling a single element as if it were part of an *infinite* array. You are unlikely to be interested in the pattern of a truly infinite array. However, you can compute the pattern contributed by a single element.
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Posted:
6 years ago
29 ago 2018, 20:01 GMT-4
Floquet boundary conditions are a way of modeling a single element as if it were part of an infinite array. You are unlikely to be interested in the pattern of a truly infinite array. However, you can compute the pattern contributed by a single element.
Thanks Robert for your reply. As you mentioned, I'm intersted in the far field pattern of an infinite array. Is there any way to compute this?
>Floquet boundary conditions are a way of modeling a single element as if it were part of an *infinite* array. You are unlikely to be interested in the pattern of a truly infinite array. However, you can compute the pattern contributed by a single element.
Thanks Robert for your reply. As you mentioned, I'm intersted in the far field pattern of an infinite array. Is there any way to compute this?
Robert Koslover
Certified Consultant
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Posted:
6 years ago
31 ago 2018, 20:11 GMT-4
Updated:
6 years ago
31 ago 2018, 20:12 GMT-4
Sorry, but did you mean to say that you are interested in the pattern of a finite array? If so, you can either: (1) model the whole finite array (this is the best and most accurate way, but most computationally intensive), or (2) superimpose analytically (keeping track of amplitude, phase, and vector direction) the computed far-fields from a repeated single element at different locations from your field point(s) of interest, while using the Floquet boundary conditions already noted. However this second approach ignores the fact that the true elements in a finite array do NOT all cleanly behave like elements embedded in an infinite array, due to the many asymmetric couplings among them.
Infinite arrays are simply not the same as finite ones. If you are truly interested in an infinite array, then your problem of interest is probably better posed as a question about wave scattering or of diffraction gratings or of waves interacting with crystal lattices, etc., rather than as one of array antenna analyses, although obviously there are some similarities. Good luck.
-------------------
Scientific Applications & Research Associates (SARA) Inc.
www.comsol.com/partners-consultants/certified-consultants/sara
Sorry, but did you mean to say that you are interested in the pattern of a *finite* array? If so, you can either: (1) model the whole finite array (this is the best and most accurate way, but most computationally intensive), or (2) superimpose *analytically* (keeping track of amplitude, phase, and vector direction) the computed far-fields from a repeated single element at different locations from your field point(s) of interest, while using the Floquet boundary conditions already noted. However this second approach ignores the fact that the true elements in a finite array do NOT all cleanly behave like elements embedded in an infinite array, due to the many asymmetric couplings among them.
*Infinite* arrays are simply not the same as finite ones. If you are truly interested in an *infinite* array, then your problem of interest is probably better posed as a question about wave scattering or of diffraction gratings or of waves interacting with crystal lattices, etc., rather than as one of array antenna analyses, although obviously there are some similarities. Good luck.
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Posted:
6 years ago
13 set 2018, 11:18 GMT-4
Sorry, but did you mean to say that you are interested in the pattern of a finite array? If so, you can either: (1) model the whole finite array (this is the best and most accurate way, but most computationally intensive), or (2) superimpose analytically (keeping track of amplitude, phase, and vector direction) the computed far-fields from a repeated single element at different locations from your field point(s) of interest, while using the Floquet boundary conditions already noted. However this second approach ignores the fact that the true elements in a finite array do NOT all cleanly behave like elements embedded in an infinite array, due to the many asymmetric couplings among them.
Infinite arrays are simply not the same as finite ones. If you are truly interested in an infinite array, then your problem of interest is probably better posed as a question about wave scattering or of diffraction gratings or of waves interacting with crystal lattices, etc., rather than as one of array antenna analyses, although obviously there are some similarities. Good luck.
Thanks for your detailed reply.
>Sorry, but did you mean to say that you are interested in the pattern of a *finite* array? If so, you can either: (1) model the whole finite array (this is the best and most accurate way, but most computationally intensive), or (2) superimpose *analytically* (keeping track of amplitude, phase, and vector direction) the computed far-fields from a repeated single element at different locations from your field point(s) of interest, while using the Floquet boundary conditions already noted. However this second approach ignores the fact that the true elements in a finite array do NOT all cleanly behave like elements embedded in an infinite array, due to the many asymmetric couplings among them.
>
>*Infinite* arrays are simply not the same as finite ones. If you are truly interested in an *infinite* array, then your problem of interest is probably better posed as a question about wave scattering or of diffraction gratings or of waves interacting with crystal lattices, etc., rather than as one of array antenna analyses, although obviously there are some similarities. Good luck.
Thanks for your detailed reply.