Buch, Englisch, 552 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 998 g
ISBN: 978-3-031-24616-6
Verlag: Springer Nature Switzerland
This book describes the most recent advances in electromagnetic theory, motivated and partly informed by developments in engineering science and nanotechnology. The collection of chapters provided in this edited book, authored by leading experts in the field, offers a bird’s eye view of recent progress in electromagnetic theory, spanning a wide range of topics of current interest, ranging from fundamental issues to applications.
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction.- 1. Our Werner always brought us joy.- 2. Scalar potentials and applications.- 3. A novel approach to electromagnetic constitutive relations.- 4. On the anatomy of Voigt plane waves.- 5. Electromagnetic radiation by finite-sized electric and magnetic dipoles embedded in homogeneous uniaxial dielectric materials.- 6. Near-field microwave imaging employing measured point-spread functions.- 7. Electromagnetic wave propagation inside rectangular chirowaveguides using the coupled mode method.- 8. On a Steklov spectrum in electromagnetics.- 9. Using boundary conditions with the Ewald–Oseen extinction theorem.- 10. Spatial sampling and interpolation techniques in computational electromagnetics and beyond.- 11. Light-matter interaction at the sub-wavelength scale: Pathways to design nanophotonic devices.- 12. Integrated photonics with near-zero index materials.- 13. Correlated disorder in broadband dielectric multilayered reflectors.- 14. Scattering from reconfigurable metasurfaces and their applications.- 15. Specular reflection and transmission of electromagnetic waves by disordered metasurfaces.- 16. Continuity of field patterns for exceptional surface waves and exceptional compound waves.- 17. Cavity modes and surface plasmon waves coupling on nanostructured surfaces for enhanced sensing and energy applications.- 18. Analysis of diffraction from all-dielectric gratings using entire-domain integralequation techniques.- 19. Rigorous coupled-wave approach and transformation optics.- 20. Mind the gap between theory and experiment.- 21. Theoretical future — Vision 2030.