Nachman - Electromagnetics
Nachman - Electromagnetics
Nachman - Electromagnetics
ELECTROMAGNETICS
16 March 2011
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Subareas Funding Trends
• Antenna Design/Operation
• Inverse Problems
• Computational EM1
• Effects of EM Exposure on Circuitry
• Nonlinear Optics
(MURI on “Propagation of Ultrashort Laser Pulses through Transparent Media” began 1 Oct 2010)
1A recent NSSEFF Mathematics awardee will be looking at exactly this topic
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Scientific Challenges
• Wave Propagation Through Complex Media
Details of time-domain dynamics of EM pulses through Dispersive, Conductive, and/or
Random/Turbulent media
Research provides optimism that the class of waveforms termed Precursors have the
potential to upgrade imaging quality.
• Antenna Design/Operation
Suitable PARTNERSHIPS of MATERIALS and GEOMETRY can deliver man-made
composites which exhibit novel EM attributes.
Such METAMATERIALS include: NIMs, PBGs, and “Unidirectional” composites.
Growing reliance on small UAVs drives the need to miniaturize antennas and make them more
responsive.
• Nonlinear Optics
Fundamental modeling/simulation research which addresses concerns with
femtosecond filament arrangements and plasma channel characteristics.
• ANTENNA MINIATURIZATION
Research on “Unidirectional” composites predicted the
design of miniature antennas whose performance was
superior to current designs
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Recent Transitions
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ACTIVE INFRARED IMAGING THROUGH CLOUDS
and OTHER (FOG, DUST) SPARSE DISCRETE MEDIA
PROJECT OBJECTIVE
investigate possibility of using wide-band, infrared (IR) pulses
for imaging through media composed of sparsely distributed
discrete particles such as clouds, fog, dust, or smoke
example: a trapezoidally modulated IR pulse
Impinging on a cloud
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pulse parameters: cloud parameters:
- carrier wavelength: λ = 10μm (ν = 30 THz) - average droplet radius: a ~ 5μm
- number of cycles in the pulse: m = 60 - average droplet-droplet distance: R ~ 1 mm 7
- rise/fall time: 0.05 of the carrier period
PROPAGATION OF A WIDE-BAND IR PULSE
THROUGH SPARSE, DISCRETE MEDIA
- medium as a filter attenuating high frequencies
- evolution of propagating pulse into a Brillouin precursor
pulse spectrum after propagating
z = 100m, 200m, 300m
through the cloud medium
pulse amplitude after propagating
z = 100m, 200m, 300m
through the cloud medium
pulse amplitude
1 THz ν (GHz)
– transmitted pulse spectrum has significant
Brillouin precursor-type structures amount of low-frequency components
– high-frequency part of the spectrum is
associated with leading and attenuated very strongly as pulse propagates
trailing edges of transmitted pulse – low-frequency part of spectrum is
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weakly attenuated
PROPAGATION OF A “CHIRPED TRAIN OF PULSES”
generate a coherent train of N pulses (with small rise/fall times)
emitted at linearly increasing pulse-pulse intervals
τ1 τ2 τ3
linearly increasing time intervals τp between pulses
chirped train characterized by: effective center frequency and effective bandwidth
after passing through clouds the pulse train becomes a train of precursor-type pulses
associated with leading and trailing edges of the transmitted trapezoidal pulses
and attenuated approximately algebraically (not exponentially)!
τ1 τ2 τ3
ground plane
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Mathematical Modeling and Experimental Validation
of Ultrafast Nonlinear Light-Matter Coupling Associated
with Filamentation in Transparent Media
MURI PM---Dr Arje Nachman (AFOSR)
Laser
RIA Receiver
One-way equivalent attenuation
Received Pulse Range
Gate
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NUMERICAL DIFFERENTIATION OF NOISY DATA
Dr Oscar Bruno (Applied Math, Caltech)
cavity loss
Nonlinear gain—>intensity discrimination
saturating gain
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Robust Mode-Locking in SPE
Stable, self-starting mode-locking – no theoretical breakdown
Spontaneous Emission
First theoretical
characterization
of ultra-short,
mode-locked
pulse formation
3-5 fs
mode-locked
pulse
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Farnum & Kutz, Optics Letters (Sept 15, 2010)
Modeling Reconfigurable Devices
Dr. Nicholas Usechak, AFRL/RY
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Spatially Dependent Laser Models
are Time Consuming to Solve
Simplification: Use the periodic boundary conditions to turn the
nonlinear partial differential equation system into a system of nonlinear
differential-delay equations. Solution time reduced by factor of 2,000.
absorber filter
gain
Related work pursued by Dr Thomas Erneaux (Belgium) and Dr Jason Gallas (Brazil)17
The Delay Equation Model
Predicts Diversity (Bifurcations)
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As the gain increases the output waveform switches regimes
ELECTROMAGNETICS
LAB TASKS
Dr. Edward Altshuler (AFRL/RY), “Novel Antenna Design” FY09 STAR Team
1. Model Electromagnetically Small Antennas: superdirective, wide-band, conformal
2. Theory/Exploitation of Metamaterials
Dr. Bradley Kramer (AFRL/RY), “Antenna Operations”
1. Phased Arrays
Dr. Saba Mudaliar (AFRL/RY), “EM Scattering Studies”
1. Predict scattering from clutter and rough surfaces
2. Pursue research in communications through plasmas surrounding hypersonic vehicles
Dr. Kris Kim (AFRL/RY), “Predict Far-Field RCS via Near-Field Data”
(Dr.) Jason Parker (AFRL/RY), “Moving Target Radar Feature Extraction”
Dr. Nicholas Usechak (AFRL/RY), “Dynamics of Reconfigurable/Agile Quantum Dot Lasers”
1. Investigate control of amplitude-phase coupling in Quantum Dot laser systems
Dr. Timothy Clarke (AFRL/RD), “Modeling of HPM Effects on Digital Electronics”
1. Derive mathematical model predicting effects (upset) on digital electronics when exposed to various
incident EM pulses
Dr. Danhong Huang (AFRL/RV), “Models for Ultrafast Carrier Scattering in Semiconductors”
1. Model IR amplifier for extremely weak signals and distant targets
Dr. William P. Roach (AFRL/RD), “Guided Waves by Laser-Induced Filamentation”
Dr. Matthew Grupen (AFRL/RY), “Electronic Band Structure for High Speed Quantum Electron Device Simulation“
1. Modeling/Simulation of quantum tunneling devices
Dr. Iyad Dajani (AFRL/RD), “Time Dynamics of Stimulated Brillouin Scattering in Fiber Amplifiers with Frequency
Modulation”
1. SBS suppression research to realize higher power in narrow linewidth fiber amps 19
Other Organizations That Fund
Related Work
• NLO
1. Extensive interaction with Dr Richard Hammond/ARO on
UltraShort Laser Pulse propagation through air
--Dr Hammond served on my FY10 USLP MURI evaluation panel and I serve
on his FY11 USLP MURI panel
2. Extensive interaction with JTO/HEL
--I manage the JTO MRI “High Power Lasers Using Optically Pumped
Semiconductor Laser (OPSL) Concepts” which ends in Aug 2012
• INVERSE SCATTERING
1. Recent interaction with Dr Joseph Myers/ARO on solving problem
of detecting IEDs
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Other Organizations That Fund
Related Work
• EM Effects on Circuitry
1. MURI at U Md on “Exploiting Nonlinear Dynamics for Novel Sensor
Networks” is managed by Dr. Michael Shlesinger, ONR Code 30
--I served on ONR MURI panel & my related UMd efforts are
complementary
2. Dr Dev Palmer, ARO, invests in what can be characterized as
“Create the ultimate Army radio”. Mostly experiments and some
concern with topography
• COMPLEX MEDIA
1. Time domain approaches and optimal waveforms are mine
2. Unidirectional composites are mine
3. Negative Index Media and PBGs are ubiquitous
“The theory and analysis work you and AFOSR has been doing has been very important ...
particularly when "fast turnaround" and "hardware-centric" viewpoints tend to dominate DoD R&D
funding.” Dr William Stachnik, ONR Code 313 21