CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDE
CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDE
SOLUTIONS OF WAVE EQUATIONS IN CYLINDRICAL COORDINATES
SOLUTIONS OF WAVE EQUATIONS IN CYLINDRICAL COORDINATES
SOLUTIONS OF WAVE EQUATIONS IN CYLINDRICAL COORDINATES
SOLUTIONS OF WAVE EQUATIONS IN CYLINDRICAL COORDINATES
SOLUTIONS OF WAVE EQUATIONS IN CYLINDRICAL COORDINATES
Bessel's Function
Bessel functions, first defined by the mathematician Daniel
Bernoulli and generalized by Friedrich Bessel, are the
canonical solutions y(x) of Bessel's differential equation
for an arbitrary complex number (the order of the Bessel
function). The most important cases are for an integer or
half-integer.
Although and produce the same differential equation
for real , it is conventional to define different Bessel
functions for these two values in such a way that the
Bessel functions are mostly smooth functions of . Bessel
functions are also known as cylinder functions or the
cylindrical harmonics because they appear in the solution
to Laplace's equation in cylindrical coordinates.
Bessel's Function-First Kind
Bessel functions of the first kind, denoted as J(x), are
solutions of Bessel's differential equation that are finite at
the origin (x = 0) for integer or positive , and diverge as x
approaches zero for negative non-integer . It is possible
to define the function by its Taylor series expansion around
x = 0:
Bessel's Function-First Kind
where (z) is the gamma function, a shifted
generalization of the factorial function to non-integer
values. The Bessel function of the first kind is an entire
function if is an integer.
The graphs of Bessel functions look roughly like
oscillating sine or cosine functions that decay
proportionally to 1/x, although their roots are not
generally periodic, except asymptotically for large x.
(The Taylor series indicates that J1(x) is the derivative of
J0(x), much like sin(x) is the derivative of cos(x); more
generally, the derivative of Jn(x) can be expressed in
terms of Jn1(x)
Bessel's Function-Second Kind
The Bessel functions of the second kind, denoted by Y(x),
occasionally denoted instead by N(x), are solutions of the Bessel
differential equation that have a singularity at the origin (x = 0).
These are sometimes called Weber functions after Heinrich Martin
Weber, and also Neumann functions after Carl Neumann.
For non-integer , Y(x) is related to J(x) by:
In the case of integer order n, the function is defined by
taking the limit as a non-integer tends to n:
SOLUTIONS OF WAVE EQUATIONS IN CYLINDRICAL COORDINATES
SOLUTIONS OF WAVE EQUATIONS IN CYLINDRICAL COORDINATES
SOLUTIONS OF WAVE EQUATIONS IN CYLINDRICAL COORDINATES
SOLUTIONS OF WAVE EQUATIONS IN CYLINDRICAL COORDINATES
SOLUTIONS OF WAVE EQUATIONS IN CYLINDRICAL COORDINATES
SOLUTIONS OF WAVE EQUATIONS IN CYLINDRICAL COORDINATES
TE MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TE MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TE MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TE MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TE MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TE MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TE MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TE MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TE MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TE MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TE MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TM MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TM MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TM MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TM MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TM MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TM MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TEM MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TEM MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TEM MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TEM MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TEM MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TEM MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
TEM MODES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
POWER TX IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES or COAXIAL LINES
POWER TX IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES or COAXIAL LINES
POWER TX IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES or COAXIAL LINES
POWER TX IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES or COAXIAL LINES
POWER TX IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES or COAXIAL LINES
POWER LOSSES IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES or COAXIAL LINES
POWER TX IN CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES or COAXIAL LINES