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Modern Graduate Electromagnetics Education—A New Perspective. W.C. Chew Director, Center for Computational EM and EM Lab. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of Illinois Urbana, IL 61801-2991 PIERS July 7, 2000. Outline. Importance of electromagnetics.
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Modern Graduate Electromagnetics Education—A New Perspective W.C. Chew Director, Center for Computational EM and EM Lab. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of Illinois Urbana, IL 61801-2991 PIERS July 7, 2000
Outline • Importance of electromagnetics. • History of Electromagnetics. • Roles of physics and mathematics in electromagnetics. • Role of computer science in electromagnetic analysis. • Type of graduate students we have to reckon with. • Roles of graduates in the academe and industry. • Conclusions.
Physics Based Signal Processing & Imaging Biomedical Engineering & BioTech Computer Chip Design & Circuits Lasers & Optoelectronics Wireless Comm. & Propagation MEMS & Microwave Engineering Electromagnetics RCS Analysis, Design, ATR & Stealth Technology Remote Sensing & Subsurface Sensing & NDE Antenna Analysis & Design EMC/EMI Analysis Importance of Electromagnetics
Importance of Electromagnetics-Background • Maxwell’s equations remains a fundamental law that drives electrical engineering, which is the study of the manipulation of electricity. • Maxwell’s equations have strong predictive power. • EM analysis is important in many engineering and scientific disciplines. • Complete solution of Maxwell’s equations can expedite many design and analysis process. • Electromagnetic analysis has been traditionally performed with either simple geometry, or approximate pencil-and-paper methods.
IncompleteBrief History of Analysis withMaxwell’s Theory • Age of simple shapes: Scattering from spheres, cylinders, planes etc. • Sommerfeld, 1896,1949, Rayleigh, 1897, Mie, 1908, Debye, 1909, Chu & Stratton, 1938, 1941, Marcuvitz, 1951, Wait, 1955. • Bowman, Senior & Uslenghi, 1969. • Age of approximations: Approximate solution methods, asymptotic and perturbation theory • Bremmer, 1951, Keller, 1956, Jones & Kline, 1958, Fock, 1965, Hanse, Lee & Deschamps, 1976, Felsen & Marcuvitz, 1973. • Age of numerical methods: MOM, FDTD, FEM • Yee, 1966, Harrington, 1968, Silvester, 1972, Rao, Wilton & Glisson, 1983, Mittra, 1980+, Taflove, 1980+.
Scattering by Simple Shapes1890s-1950s • EM theory was predated by theory of fluid and theory of sound. • They were very rich in mathematics, with famous mathematicians such as Euler, Lagrange, Stokes, Gauss. • Many mathematics of low-Reynold number flow and scalar wave theory of sound can be transplanted with embellishment to EM theory.
Sommerfeld Half-Space Problem1949 • Radiation of a Hertzian dipole on top of the half-space earth was solved in terms of Sommerfeld integrals.
Approximate Scattering Theory1950s-1970s • Physical optics approximation, Kirchhoff approximation, geometrical optics approximation, geometrical theory of diffraction etc. • Ansatz based: • The leading order coefficients are often obtained from canonical solutions such as the Sommerfeld half-plane problem, scattering by a sphere, Watson transformation, etc.
Numerical Methods1960s • Method of moments (Harrington, 1960s) • Integral equation based. • Versatile geometry handling. • Small number of unknowns. • Cons: DENSE MATRIX SYSTEM. • Finite Difference Time Domain Method (Yee, 1960s) • Differential equation based. • Simplicity (euphoric). • Sparse matrix system. • Cons: LARGE NUMBER OF UNKNOWNS. • Cons: GRID DISPERSION ERROR.
Basic Physics Knowledge of a Student • Modern physics • Understand the thought processes and abstractions that go on in the field of physics. • Physics of classical electromagnetics • Fundamental solutions of simple shapes and geometries. • Physics that arises from approximate method, surface waves, creeping waves, lateral waves, Goubaud waves, guided modes, evanescent modes (tunneling), radation modes, leaky modes, specular reflections, edge diffractions. • Metamorphosis of the physics over different lengthscales • Physics of electrostatics and magnetostatics. • Physics of mid frequency and high frequency electromagnetics. • Physics of optics and rays.
Basic Math Knowledge of a Student • Mathematical analysis: • Understand the finesse, care and precautions that mathematicians go through in their work. • Harmonic analysis, complex variables. • Perturbation and asymptotic methods. • Linear algebra, linear vector spaces. • Modern demands: • Functional analysis. • PDE theory. • Approximation theory, error bounds. • Topology.
Computer Science Knowledge • Knowledge of modern programming languages--object oriented programming paradigm. • Parallel computing and large scale computing. • Algorithms, fast algorithms. • Computer architecture. • Computational geometry.
Types of Graduate Students • Types of Graduate Students: • Students who will do A when instructed to do A. • Students who will do A+B when instructed to do A. • Students who will do C when instructed to do A.
How do we stimulate creativity? • We should work to bring the best people in to work in our field. • Good people will always create new areas to work on and forge new frontiers. • Cultivate independent thinking--old Chinese adage: • If you believe completely in your book, it’s better not to have books. • If you believe completely in your teacher, it’s better not to have teachers.
Roles of Grad Students in Academe • Software research. • Study and develop algorithms and methodology. • Apply methodology to applications. • Computer programming. • Hardware research. • Building a component of a larger system. • Designing a component using existing CAD tools.
Roles of graduates in industry • Most graduates work as system and component design engineers. • Hence, it is imperative that graduate students understand the physics of electromagnetics. • Understanding the physics deeply means understanding the mechanism behind how things work. • Therefore, in addition to mathematical analysis and computer programming, and EM students has to understand the physics behind a problem.
Conclusions • Electromagnetics will always remain important in electrical engineering technologies. • The long and rich history of electromagnetics offers us a challenge to impart our knowledge to graduate students. • The selected Important knowledge changes with changing times. • Imparting physical insight into our students is important. • It is imperative that we bring the best and the most creative people to work in our field. • There is no limit to problems we can work on, and creative people will forge new frontiers to rejuvenate the field.