Electromagnetic Scattering by Obliquely Oriented Cylinders
- 1 July 1966
- journal article
- research article
- Published by AIP Publishing in Journal of Applied Physics
- Vol. 37 (8), 3195-3203
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1703184
Abstract
Numerical results for scattering coefficients and extinction efficiencies for obliquely oriented infinite circular cylinders with index of refraction m=1.6 are presented. The extinction efficiencies for oblique incidence have a much more intense resonance structure than those for normal incidence. An analysis is made of these resonance modes for large angles of incidence and comparison is made with the propagation modes in cylindrical dielectric waveguides. A polarization reversal via extinction is noted for thin cylinders with sufficient tilt angles. By comparison with preliminary experimental results on finite cylinders it is shown that the theoretical solution for infinite cylinders may be usefully applied to the finite case as long as the angle of incidence of the radiation is small.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Diffraction of Waves By a Penetrable RibbonJournal of Mathematical Physics, 1963
- Cylindrical Dielectric Waveguide Modes*Journal of the Optical Society of America, 1961
- Microwave Analog to the Scattering of Light by Nonspherical ParticlesJournal of Applied Physics, 1961
- Scattering by Nonspherical ParticlesJournal of Applied Physics, 1960
- Diffraction by a smooth objectCommunications on Pure and Applied Mathematics, 1959
- SCATTERING OF ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVES BY COAXIAL CYLINDERSCanadian Journal of Physics, 1956
- SCATTERING OF A PLANE WAVE FROM A CIRCULAR DIELECTRIC CYLINDER AT OBLIQUE INCIDENCECanadian Journal of Physics, 1955
- Scattering of Plane Waves by Soft Obstacles. III. Scattering by Obstacles with Spherical and Circular Cylindrical SymmetryPhysical Review B, 1952
- Scattering of Plane Waves by Soft Obstacles. II. Scattering by Cylinders, Spheroids, and DisksJournal of Applied Physics, 1951
- X. On the electromagnetic theory of lightJournal of Computers in Education, 1881