Author:
ENGINEER J. C.,KING J. R.,TEW R. H.
Abstract
The scattering of high-frequency sound waves by two-dimensional
curved boundaries has
received much attention over the past few decades, with particular interest
in the effects of
tangential ray incidence. In the event that the radius of curvature is
not small,
an analysis near the point of tangency gives rise to the Fock–Leontovič
equation for the local field amplitude
which, in turn, matches the creeping field of Keller's geometrical
theory of diffraction. If
the radius of curvature is sufficiently small, however, then this analysis
is not valid and it is
necessary to solve the full Helmholtz equation in the presence
of a parabolic boundary. Under
these conditions, which are canonical for diffraction by a sufficiently
slender body, results
are presented for the case of a plane wave impinging upon an acoustically
hard parabolic
cylinder. This diffraction process engenders a creeping field at one tip
of the slender body,
which then propagates around the body to the other tip. Here its energy
is partially reflected,
partially transmitted and partially radiated out in a detached field. A
full description of
this is given, along with a discussion of the ‘blunt’
limit in which we show that not only do
we get the traditional creeping field of Keller's geometrical
theory of diffraction, but also
an exponentially small backward-propagating creeping field not predicted
by traditional ray
methods.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
18 articles.
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