1082

J. Opt. Soc. Am. A / Vol. 21, No. 6 / June 2004

A. Sharma and A. Agrawal

New method for nonparaxial beam propagation Anurag Sharma and Arti Agrawal Department of Physics, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, New Delhi-110 016, India Received August 29, 2003; revised manuscript received January 6, 2004; accepted January 30, 2004 A new method for solving the wave equation is presented that is nonparaxial and can be applied to wide-angle beam propagation. It shows very good stability characteristics in the sense that relatively larger step sizes can be taken. An implementation by use of the collocation method is presented in which only simple matrix multiplications are involved and no numerical matrix diagonalization or inversion is needed. The method is hence faster and is also highly accurate. © 2004 Optical Society of America OCIS codes: 130.2790, 230.7370, 350.5500.

1. INTRODUCTION Recently several schemes have been suggested for wideangle and bidirectional beam propagation through guided-wave devices.1–13 In general, this nonparaxial propagation would involve solving directly the wave equation, which contains a second-order partial derivative with respect to z (the general direction of propagation) as against the first-order partial derivative in the paraxial wave equation. All the methods for nonparaxial beam propagation discussed in the literature approach this problem iteratively; a numerical effort equivalent to solving the paraxial equation several times is involved. The actual number of iterations depends on the desired accuracy and the obliquity of the beam. Many of these methods neglect the backward-propagating components and solve the one-way wave equation; but even methods that deal with bidirectional propagation employ special techniques either to suppress or to model evanescent modes, which are a source of instability in these methods.8–10 In all these methods, the square root of the propagation operator involved in the wave equation is approximated in various ways. One of the approximations used is based on the Pade´ approximants.1–11 We have recently shown that a direct numerical solution (DNS) of the scalar wave equation gives very good accuracy and is also numerically efficient.14 The method is nonparaxial and hence is applicable to wide-angle as well as to bidirectional propagation. We used the collocation method15–17 to formulate our equations. In this paper we present a new method of solving the nonparaxial wave equation that uses symmetrized splitting of the operators. Examples show that this method is more tolerant to larger step sizes than other methods, including the DNS.14

2. SPLIT-STEP NONPARAXIAL METHOD For simplicity, we shall confine our discussions in this paper to two-dimensional wave propagation for which the scalar wave equation is given by

⳵ 2␺ ⳵x

2



⳵ 2␺ ⳵z

2

⫹ k 0 2 n 2 共 x, z 兲 ␺ 共 x, z 兲 ⫽ 0,

(1)

1084-7529/2004/061082-06$15.00

where ␺ (x, z) represents one of the Cartesian components of the electric field (generally referred to as the scalar field) and n 2 (x, z) defines the refractive-index distribution of the medium. The time dependence of the field is assumed to be exp(i␻t), and k 0 ⫽ ␻ /c is the free-space wave number. Equation (1) can be rewritten as

⳵ ⌽/ ⳵ z ⫽ H共 z 兲 ⌽共 z 兲 , where

⌽共 z 兲 ⫽

冋册

␺ ⳵␺ , ⳵z

H共 z 兲 ⫽



(2)

0

1

⫺ⵜt ⫺ k 0 n 2

2

2

0



.

(3)

The operator H can be written as a sum of two operators, one representing the propagation through a uniform medium of index, say n r , the other representing the effect of the index variation of the guiding structure; thus H共 z 兲 ⫽ H1 ⫹ H2 共 z 兲 ⫽



0

1

⫺ⵜt ⫺ k 0 n r 2

2

2

0

册 冋 ⫹

0

0

k0 共nr ⫺ n 兲 2

2

2

0



. (4)

A formal solution of Eq. (2), after use of the symmetrized splitting of summation of operators as in Eq. (4), can be written as ⌽共 z ⫹ ⌬z 兲 ⫽ PQ共 z 兲 P⌽共 z 兲 ⫹ O 共共 ⌬z 兲 3 兲 , P ⫽ exp共 12 H1 ⌬z 兲 ,

Q共 z 兲 ⫽ exp共 H2 ⌬z 兲 .

(5) (6)

The operator P represents propagation in the uniform medium n r over a distance of ⌬z/2 and hence can be evaluated by using any method such as the collocation, finite-difference, or fast-Fourier-transform methods. The operator Q(z) can also be easily evaluated because of the specific form of the matrix, and it can be easily seen that Q共 z 兲 ⫽



1

0

k 0 共 n r ⫺ n 兲 ⌬z 2

2

© 2004 Optical Society of America

2

1



,

(7)

A. Sharma and A. Agrawal

Vol. 21, No. 6 / June 2004 / J. Opt. Soc. Am. A

since 共 H2 兲

m

⫽ 0,

m ⭓ 2,

(8)

because of the special form of the matrix H2 . It may be noted that for lossless propagation the matrix P would be Hermitian, while the matrix Q always has a determinant value equal to unity. The split-step nonparaxial (SSNP) method given above can be implemented with any of the numerical methods employed to solve the wave equation, e.g., the fastFourier-transform beam-propagation method (BPM), finite-difference (FD) BPM, or the collocation method. In this paper we discuss implementation by use of the collocation method; implementation by use of the FD-BPM will be discussed in a future paper.

We have implemented the SSNP formalism in the collocation method, in which the wave equation is converted to a matrix ordinary differential equation by using the representation of the field ␺ (x, z) as a linear combination of a set of orthogonal basis functions, ␾ n (x): N

␺ 共 x, z 兲 ⫽



c n共 z 兲 ␾ n共 x 兲 ,

(9)

n⫽1

where c n (z) are the expansion coefficients, n is the order of the basis functions, and N is the number of basis functions used in the expansion. The choice of ␾ n (x) depends on the boundary conditions and the symmetry of the guiding structure. The expansion coefficients c n (z) are unknown and represent the variation of the field with z. In the collocation method,15–17 these coefficients are effectively obtained by requiring that the differential equation, Eq. (1) be satisfied exactly by the expansion, Eq. (9), at N collocation points x j , j ⫽ 1, 2,..., N, which are chosen such that these are the zeros of ␾ N⫹1 (x). Thus, by using this condition, and with some algebraic manipulations,15–17 one converts the wave equation, Eq. (1), into a matrix ordinary differential equation: d2 ⌿/dz 2 ⫹ 关 S0 ⫹ k 0 2 n r 2 I ⫹ R共 z 兲兴 ⌿共 z 兲 ⫽ 0, with

⌿共 z 兲 ⫽

冋 册

␺ 共x1 , z兲 ␺ 共x2 , z兲 , ] ␺ 共xN , z兲

R共 z 兲 ⫽ k 0

2



⌬n 2 共 x 1 , z 兲

0

0

⌬n 共 x 2 , z 兲

]

]

0

2

N → ⬁. Thus the accuracy of the collocation method improves indefinitely as N increases. The collocation equation is a matrix ordinary differential equation and can be solved as an initial value problem by using any standard method, such as the Runge–Kutta method, as we have done in the DNS.14 In this paper we solve this equation by using the SSNP discussed in Section 2. We have chosen here a set of sinusoidal functions as the basis functions,16,17 and, following the procedure outlined in Section 2, we obtain the formal solution of Eq. (10) as in Eq. (5), with the operators P and Q and the field function ⌽ now being block matrices, ⌽共 z 兲 ⫽





⌿ , d⌿/dz

P ⫽ exp

3. IMPLEMENTATION IN THE COLLOCATION METHOD







0

0 ] 0

(10)



,

⌬n 2 共 x N , z 兲 (11)

where ⌬n 2 (x m , z) ⫽ n 2 (x m , z) ⫺ n r 2 ; m ⫽ 1, 2,..., N; and S0 is a constant known matrix defined by the basis functions.15–17 We refer to Eq. (10) as the collocation equation. In deriving this equation from the wave equation, Eq. (1), no approximation has been made except that N is finite and Eq. (10) is exactly equivalent to Eq. (1) as

1083

Q共 z 兲 ⫽



再 冋 ⌬z

0

I

2 ⫺共 S0 ⫹ k 0 n r I兲 2

I

0

⫺R共 z 兲

I



2

0

册冎

,

,

(12)

where I and 0 are the unit and the null matrices, respectively. The operator P represents propagation in a uniform medium of index n r over a distance ⌬z/2 and can be easily obtained as a constant square matrix by using the basis functions and their properties.17 It has to be evaluated only once. Each propagation step thus requires 12 multiplications of an N ⫻ N square matrix with a column matrix except at the first and the last steps where eight more such multiplications are required. We would like to emphasize that using the sinusoidal basis functions in the collocation method here has an advantage, since no fast Fourier transform, matrix inversion, or matrix diagonalization need be done for propagation through a uniform medium, and all matrices involved are obtained analytically; the details are presented in Appendix A.

4. NUMERICAL RESULTS We consider a number of examples to show the effectiveness of the method. In the first example, we consider the propagation of the fundamental mode through a tilted, graded-index waveguide,5 with index profile given by n s ⫽ 2.1455, ⌬n n 2 (x) ⫽ n s 2 ⫹ 2n s ⌬n sech2(2x/w), ⫽ 0.003, w ⫽ 5 ␮m, and ␭ ⫽ 1.3 ␮m. The computation was done with 530 collocation points, and the width of the numerical window was ⬃185 ␮m. As a measure of accuracy, we computed an error (ERR), that includes the effects of both the dissipation in power as well as the loss of shape of the propagating mode:

ERR ⫽ 1 ⫺



冏冕

␺ exact* ␺ calcdx

兩 ␺ inp兩 dx • 2





2

,

(13)

兩 ␺ exact兩 dx 2

where ␺ inp , ␺ calc , and ␺ exact are the input, the propagated, and the exact fields, respectively.18 The first result for a straight waveguide, which we have plotted in Fig. 1, shows the performance of the method with respect to the stability of the method for relatively larger values of ⌬z. The DNS based on the

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J. Opt. Soc. Am. A / Vol. 21, No. 6 / June 2004

Runge–Kutta solution of the collocation equation14 becomes unstable for ⌬z ⬎ 0.1 ␮m, whereas the SSNP method remains stable even for 1 ␮m. To the best of our knowledge, a step size equal to or larger than 1 ␮m for nonparaxial propagation has not been reported before. Even with such a large step, an accuracy better than 0.001 in propagation over a distance of 1000 ␮m is significantly better than the accuracies reported in the literature. In Fig. 2 we have plotted the error in propagation (ERR) as a function of the tilt angle. The figure shows that the SSNP method gives accuracy of the order of 10⫺4 even with a step size of 0.25 ␮m, which is much better than that obtained by Shibayama et al.5 To illustrate the point, let us consider the error for a tilt angle of 50°. The error in the best results reported by Shibayama et al.5 for the three-step generalized Douglas (GD) scheme is ⬃0.04 with ⌬z ⫽ 0.05 ␮m, whereas in our method the error is less than 0.001 with ⌬z ⫽ 0.25 ␮m. This would thus mean much faster and more accurate propagation. Of course, one gets better accuracy with the DNS, since the single-step error in the Runge–Kutta method (used in the DNS) is O((⌬z) 5 ) as against O((⌬z) 3 ) in the SSNP method, but then the computation effort is significantly reduced with the latter method. We next consider propagation of the TE1 mode in stepindex waveguides. Figure 3 shows a plot of ERR as a

A. Sharma and A. Agrawal

Fig. 3. ERR as a function of the number of propagation steps with ⌬z for the step-index waveguide.6

Fig. 4. ERR with the tilt angle of the step-index waveguide6 for propagation up to 100 ␮m.

Fig. 1. Error in propagation (ERR) as a function of the number of propagation steps with ⌬z for the graded-index waveguide.5

Fig. 2. ERR with the tilt angle of the graded-index waveguide5 for propagation up to 100 ␮m.

function of the propagation steps for the step-index waveguide6 with n co ⫽ 1.002, n clad ⫽ 1.000, ␭ ⫽ 1.0 ␮m, and w ⫽ 15.092 ␮m. Even with a step size as large as 0.4 ␮m, the propagation is extremely stable and highly accurate, while DNS becomes unstable for this step size. Figure 4 shows performance with variation in tilt angle of the waveguide. We can see that the curves for the present method and DNS14 are very close, except for the SSNP method with step size 0.4 ␮m at 0°, where error is higher. However, the error value even with 0.4-␮m step size is better than that at 50° reported by Yamauchi et al.6 The SSNP method gives better accuracy with twice the step size used by Yamauchi et al.6; in fact, only 500 computation points are required as against 1800 by Yamauchi et al.6 Figures 5 and 6 show performance of the method for the TE1 mode in the benchmark waveguide19 with n co ⫽ 3.3, n clad ⫽ 3.17, ␭ ⫽ 1.55 ␮m, and w ⫽ 8.8 ␮m. As the refractive-index change from core to cladding is very large here, only small step sizes can be taken, yet the SSNP method is stable for a step size of 0.2 ␮m, as shown in Fig. 5. In fact, the performance at large tilt angles with 0.2-␮m step size is quite close to that for the DNS,14 as shown in Fig. 6. We may note that oscillatory behavior in the error curves becomes more pronounced for the step-index waveguide with larger index jump at the core–

A. Sharma and A. Agrawal

cladding interface (compare Figs. 3 and 5). This may be attributed to the fact that any discretization would approximate the index step by an interpolating curve between two successive sample points around the step. As expected this oscillation becomes larger as ⌬z increases from 0.01 to 0.2 ␮m [although the log scale deceptively shows nearly equal oscillations]. The final example is that of propagation of the TE10 mode in the benchmark waveguide19 described above, and we have obtained the power remaining in the guide after propagation of 100 ␮m at a tilt angle of 20°. Table 1 compares the SSNP method with other methods. It is quite obvious from the table that with fewer points, the SSNP method shows higher accuracy. The method is also faster than the DNS,14 taking only about half the time. It is also much easier to implement. An important parameter to choose is the reference refractive index n r . Although, in principle, its value can be arbitrarily chosen, the value in general affects the accuracy. However, as Fig. 7 shows, the accuracy with the new method is largely insensitive to the choice of n r . We would like to add that neither the SSNP method nor the DNS method is very sensitive to perturbations in the value of the initial field or its derivative. We have carried out preliminary investigations by adding and subtracting a small error (10⫺3 ) alternately in the initial field and its derivative at successive sample points. The error in the overlap integral was 1.9 ⫻ 10⫺2 as against 2.6

Vol. 21, No. 6 / June 2004 / J. Opt. Soc. Am. A

1085

Table 1. Comparison of Error–Power Loss in Propagation to 100 ␮m in the Benchmarka Step-Index Waveguide for TE10 Modes with Different Methods Method

Nz

Nx

Power in Waveguide at 20°

SSNP DNSa AMIGOb FD2BPMb FTBPMb LETI-FDb

1000 1000 1429 1000 1000 200

800 800 1311 2048 256 1024

⬃0.96 ⬃0.90 ⬃0.95 ⬃0.95 ⬃0.55 ⬃0.15

a b

Ref. 14 Ref. 19.

Fig. 7. ERR with the reference refractive index for the benchmark step-index waveguide19 for propagation up to 100 ␮m with step size 0.1 ␮m at 40°.

⫻ 10⫺5 for propagation of the TE1 mode at 0° for 100 ␮m with a propagation step size of 0.1 ␮m, in the benchmark waveguide19 where n co ⫽ 3.3, n clad ⫽ 3.17, ␭ ⫽ 1.55 ␮m, and w ⫽ 8.8 ␮m. Thus the propagation remains stable.

5. CONCLUSIONS

Fig. 5. ERR as a function of the number of propagation steps with ⌬z for the benchmark step-index waveguide.19

We have presented a new method for solving the nonparaxial wave equation based on a symmetrized splitting of the operator. We have implemented this method with the collocation method. We have also included comparison with reported results of other methods. The method shows better stability with relatively larger step sizes being possible. The method involves only simple multiplication of matrices, and no numerical diagonalization or inversion of any matrix is needed. It is therefore much faster and easier to implement and is more efficient than other methods.

APPENDIX A: EVALUATION OF exp(H1 ⌬z) This amounts to a solution of the collocation Eq. (10) without the R(z) term, i.e., propagation in a medium of uniform refractive index n r over a distance ⌬z, that is, solution of the equation Fig. 6. ERR with the tilt angle of the benchmark step-index waveguide19 for propagation up to 100 ␮m.

d2 ⌿/dz 2 ⫹ S⌿共 z 兲 ⫽ 0,

(A1)

1086

J. Opt. Soc. Am. A / Vol. 21, No. 6 / June 2004

A. Sharma and A. Agrawal

where S ⫽ S0 ⫹ k 0 2 n r 2 I is a constant matrix. Equation (A1) can also be written as

⳵ ⌽/ ⳵ z ⫽ H1 ⌽共 z 兲 ,

(A2)

decomposition required as per Eq. (A7) is simply done analytically. In this case, we choose the basis functions as

where ⌽(z) is defined in Eq. (12), and H1 ⫽



␾ n 共 x 兲 ⫽ cos共 v n x 兲



0

I

⫺S

0

⫽ sin共 v n x 兲

⌽共 z ⫹ ⌬z 兲 ⫽ exp共 H1 ⌬z 兲 ⌽共 z 兲 .

1

冑S

where v n ⫽ n ␲ /2L, with the computation window running from ⫺L to L. The collocation points are at

(A3)

The evaluation of exp(H1 ⌬z) can be done by diagonalization of H1 ; however, H1 is a 2N ⫻ 2N nonsymmetric matrix and its diagonalization may involve complex matrix algebra and hence, present some difficulties. We present here a much simpler and analytical method for evaluating exp(H1 ⌬z). Since Eq. (A1) represents propagation in a uniform medium, the propagation can be obtained by an eigenvalue decomposition method. Thus the solution of Eq. (A1) over a single step can be written as sin共 冑S⌬z 兲 ⌿⬘ 共 z 兲 ,

xj ⫽

⌿⬘ 共 z ⫹ ⌬z 兲 ⫽ ⫺冑S sin共 冑S⌬z 兲 ⌿共 z 兲 ⫹ cos共 冑S⌬z 兲 ⌿⬘ 共 z 兲 . (A5) Using this solution in Eq. (A3) gives



1

cos共 冑S⌬z 兲

冑S

⫺冑S sin共 冑S⌬z 兲

sin共 冑S⌬z 兲

cos共 冑S⌬z 兲



. (A6)

To evaluate the functions of the matrices involved in Eq. (A6), we use the diagonalization procedure. Thus, let S ⫽ V⌳V⫺1 where V and ⌳ are the eigenvectors and eigenvalues of S, respectively. Then, we have

冑S⌬z ⫽ V共 冑⌳⌬z 兲 V⫺1 ,

冑⌳ ⫽ diag. 共 冑⌳ i 兲



2j N⫹1

sin共 冑S⌬z 兲 ⫽ V sin共 冑⌳⌬z 兲 V⫺1 .

(A9)

Thus exp共 H1 ⌬z 兲 ⫽

冋 册 V

0

0

V





冋 冋

cos共 冑⌳⌬z 兲 ⫺冑⌳ sin共 冑⌳⌬z 兲

V⫺

0

0

V⫺1



.

1

冑⌳

sin共 冑⌳⌬z 兲

cos共 冑⌳⌬z 兲



(A10)

The operator P in Eq. (12) is thus given by Eq. (A10) with ⌬z replaced by ⌬z/2. In the case of sinusoidal basis functions in the collocation method,16 the form of S is such that the eigenvalue

(A12)

(A13) where A is a constant square matrix with elements as A ij ⫽ ␾ j (x i ) and the matrix G is given by G ⫽ diag. 共 ⫺v 1 2

⫺v 2 2

⫺v 3 2 ...⫺v N 2 兲 .

(A14)

Thus we have V ⫽ A,

⌳ i ⫽ k 02n r2 ⫺ v i2.

(A15)

Further, it can be shown that V⫺1 ⫽ A⫺1 ⫽



2 N⫹1



AT .

(A16)

Thus no matrix eigenvalue equation need be solved. With these values of V and ⌳, one obtains the following from Eq. (A10): exp共 H1 ⌬z 兲 ⫽



2









冊冋 册 A

0

0

A

c1

0

¯

0

c2

]

]

0

0

N⫹1

and (A8)

j ⫽ 1, 2, 3...,N.

S ⫽ AGA⫺1 ⫹ k 0 2 n r 2 I ⫽ A共 G ⫹ k 0 2 n r 2 I兲 A⫺1 ,

(A7)

cos共 冑S⌬z 兲 ⫽ V cos共 冑⌳⌬z 兲 V⫺1 ,



⫺ 1 L,

The matrix S in this case is then given by16,17

(A4)

exp共 H1 ⌬z 兲 ⫽

for n ⫽ 2, 4, 6,...N, (A11)

is a constant matrix and has to be evaluated just once. A formal solution of Eq. (A2) can be written as

⌿共 z ⫹ ⌬z 兲 ⫽ cos共 冑S⌬z 兲 ⌿共 z 兲 ⫹

for n ⫽ 1, 3, 5,...N ⫺ 1,

˜s 1

0

0

˜s 2

]

]

0

0

T

A

0

0

AT

0

s1

0

¯

0

0

s2

¯

]

]

]

cN

0

0



¯

0

c1

0

¯

0

0

c2

¯

]

]

]

˜s N

0

0





¯

0

¯

0

¯

sN



¯

] 0

¯

0

¯

cN



,

]



(A17)

where c i ⫽ cos共 冑⌳ i ⌬z 兲 ,

s i ⫽ 1/冑⌳ i sin共 冑⌳ i ⌬z 兲 ,

˜s i ⫽ ⫺冑⌳ i sin共 冑⌳ i ⌬z 兲 . In cases where ⌳ i is imaginary [see Eq. (A15)], the quantities c i , s i , and ˜s i remain real, and sine and cosine functions are evaluated through the corresponding hyperbolic functions.

A. Sharma and A. Agrawal

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This work was partially supported by grant 03(0976)/02/ EMR-II from the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), India. A. Agrawal is a CSIR research fellow. Corresponding author A. Sharma’s e-mail address is [email protected].

Vol. 21, No. 6 / June 2004 / J. Opt. Soc. Am. A 9.

10. 11. 12.

REFERENCES 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

6. 7. 8.

D. Yevick and M. Glasner, ‘‘Forward wide-angle light propagation in semiconductor rib waveguides,’’ Opt. Lett. 15, 174–176 (1990). G. R. Hadley, ‘‘Multistep method for wide-angle beam propagation,’’ Opt. Lett. 17, 1743–1745 (1992). Y. Chung and N. Dagli, ‘‘A wide-angle propagation technique using an explicit finite-difference scheme,’’ IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett. 6, 540–542 (1994). W. P. Huang and C. L. Xu, ‘‘A wide-angle vector beam propagation method,’’ IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett. 4, 1118–1120 (1992). J. Shibayama, K. Matsubara, M. Sekiguchi, J. Yamauchi, and H. Nakano, ‘‘Efficient nonuniform scheme for paraxial and wide-angle finite difference beam propagation methods,’’ J. Lightwave Technol. 17, 677–683 (1999). J. Yamauchi, J. Shibayama, M. Sekiguchi, and H. Nakano, ‘‘Improved multistep method for wide-angle beam propagation,’’ IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett. 8, 1361–1363 (1996). Y. Tsuji, M. Koshiba, and T. Tanabe, ‘‘A wide-angle beam propagation method based on a finite element scheme,’’ IEEE Trans. Magn. 33, 1544–1547 (1997). H. Rao, M. J. Steel, R. Scarmozzino, and R. Osgood, ‘‘Complex propagators for evanescent waves in bidirectional beam propagation method,’’ J. Lightwave Technol. 18, 1155–1160 (2000).

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H. El-Refaei, I. Betty, and D. Yevick, ‘‘The application of complex Pade´ approximants to reflection at optical waveguide facets,’’ IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett. 12, 158–160 (2000). Y. Y. Lu and S. H. Wei, ‘‘A new iterative bidirectional beam propagation method,’’ IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett. 14, 1533–1535 (2002). C. Vassallo, ‘‘Limitations of the wide-angle beam propagation method in non-uniform systems,’’ J. Opt. Soc. Am. A 13, 761–770 (1996). R. P. Ratowsky, J. A. Fleck, Jr., and M. D. Feit, ‘‘Accurate solution of the Helmholtz equation by Lanczos orthogonalization for media with loss or gain,’’ Opt. Lett. 17, 10–12 (1992). Q. Luo and C. T. Law, ‘‘Discrete Bessel-based Arnoldi method for nonparaxial wave propagation,’’ IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett. 14, 50–52 (2002). A. Sharma and A. Agrawal, ‘‘Wide angle and bi-directional beam propagation using the collocation method for the nonparaxial wave equation,’’ Opt. Commun. 216, 41–45 (2003). A. Sharma and S. Banerjee, ‘‘Method for propagation of total fields or beams through optical waveguides,’’ Opt. Lett. 14, 96 (1989). A. Taneja and A. Sharma, ‘‘Propagation of beams through optical waveguiding structures: comparison of the beam propagation method (BPM) and the collocation method,’’ J. Opt. Soc. Am. A 10, 1739–1745 (1993). A. Sharma, ‘‘Collocation method for wave propagation through optical waveguiding structures,’’ in Methods for Modeling and Simulation of Guided-Wave Optoelectronic Devices, W. P. Huang, ed. (EMW, Cambridge, Mass., 1995), pp. 143–198. I. Ilic´, R. Scarmozzino, and R. Osgood, ‘‘Investigation of the Pade´ approximant-based wide-angle beam propagation method for accurate modeling of waveguiding circuits,’’ J. Lightwave Technol. 14, 2813–2822 (1996). H.-P. Nolting and R. Ma¨rz, ‘‘Results of benchmark tests for different numerical BPM algorithms,’’ J. Lightwave Technol. 13, 216–224 (1995).

New method for nonparaxial beam propagation

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New Modulation Method for Matrix Converters_PhD Thesis.pdf. New Modulation Method for Matrix Converters_PhD Thesis.pdf. Open. Extract. Open with. Sign In.

Fire-Front Propagation Using the Level Set Method
Mar 25, 2009 - National Institute of Standards and Technology. Gaithersburg ..... Both simulations seem to do a reasonable job quantitatively of .... Fires,” in “Remote Sensing and Modeling Applications to Wildland Fires,” a volume ... Computat

Fire-Front Propagation Using the Level Set Method
Mar 25, 2009 - Both simulations seem to do a reasonable job quantitatively of ... the solution obtained must depend at least to some degree on the ... Computational Geometry, Fluid Dynamics, Computer Vision, and Material Science, Cam-.

Beam - GitHub
Grid the data. Gridding in practice? ... Big field of view : station, direction, time and frequency dependent. Other direction dependent effects : - Projection of the ...

VLA Beam Squint - GitHub
Oct 8, 2009 - VLA Beam Squint. Fred Dulwich. &. Shannon Jaeger. Page 2. What is Beam Squint? ▫ Two circular polarized feeds offset from prime focus.

Keyword Spices: A New Method for Building Domain ...
domain-specific search engine for computer science research papers. ... We call this the filtering model for building .... simplify keyword spices in the way that results in high value ..... national World Wide Web Conference(WWW6), pages 189–.

Modeling of a New Method for Metal Filaments Texturing
Key words: Metallic Filament, Yarn, Texturizing, Modeling, Magnetic Field. Introduction ... The Opera 8.7 software is used for simulating the force of rotating ...

A new characterisation method for rubber (PDF Download Available)
heterogeneous mechanical test, measuring the displacement/strain field using suitable ..... ments, load, specimen geometry and unknown parameters.

Development of new evaluation method for external safety ... - Safepark
Under Responsible Care companies follow these six principles: .... In this mobile centre the involved fire chiefs (or police chiefs) can plan how best to deal with ...

A New Method for Computing the Transmission ...
Email: [email protected], [email protected]. Abstract—The ... the transmission capacity of wireless ad hoc networks for three plausible point ...

A new method for evaluating forest thinning: growth ...
treatments designed to reduce competition between trees and promote high ... However, this advantage may be offset by the countervailing physiological constraints imposed by large size, resulting in lower growth rates. ..... Europe: data set.

A new hybrid method for gene selection - Springer Link
Jul 15, 2010 - Abstract Gene selection is a significant preprocessing of the discriminant analysis of microarray data. The classical gene selection methods can ...

Development of a new method for sampling and ...
excel software was obtained. The calibration curves were linear over six .... cyclophosphamide than the analytical detection limit. The same time in a study by.

A new method for evaluating forest thinning: growth ...
compared with cumulative growth (percentage of total) for each tree in that order. ..... Europe: data set. Available from ... Comprehensive database of diameter-based biomass re- gressions for ... Plant physiology: a big issue for trees. Nature.

Development of new evaluation method for external safety ... - Safepark
A fascinating description of the development of Responsible Care to a world wide ... checked by a call from the emergency response centre to each control room.

A New Histogram Modification-based Method for ...
Abstract—Video enhancement has played very important roles in many applications. However, most existing enhancement methods only focus on the spatial quality within a frame while the temporal qualities of the enhanced video are often unguaranteed.