Determining distributed source waveforms in casual, lossy, dispersive, plane-wave (CLDP) materials

Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 1998. === Includes bibliographical references (p. 284-291). === This thesis presents and employs novel mathematics for the inversion of linear, first-kind Fredholm integral equations (IEs) w...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lyons, Robert Joseph, 1963-
Other Authors: Chatham M. Cooke.
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/47722
id ndltd-MIT-oai-dspace.mit.edu-1721.1-47722
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-MIT-oai-dspace.mit.edu-1721.1-477222019-05-02T16:09:35Z Determining distributed source waveforms in casual, lossy, dispersive, plane-wave (CLDP) materials Lyons, Robert Joseph, 1963- Chatham M. Cooke. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 1998. Includes bibliographical references (p. 284-291). This thesis presents and employs novel mathematics for the inversion of linear, first-kind Fredholm integral equations (IEs) which have a time t dependent response signal, a space z dependent source waveform, and a kernel with time dependence (at each z) corresponding to the impulse response of a thickness z slab of causal, lossy, dispersive, homogeneous material through which planar disturbances propagate according to the wave equation. These materials are called CLDP materials; these IEs are called CLDP IEs. These novel mathematics are applicable to the PESAW (aka PEA) charge recovery method. The proposed inversion method recognizes that the (temporal) Fourier transform of a CLDP IE's response signal can be interpreted as the values of the (spatial) Laplace transform of that IE's source waveform along a Laplace plane path determined by the material's propagation wavenumber k(f). Executing the Laplace transform inversion integral along this CLDP path yields an inverse CLDP IE which recovers the true source waveform provided that source waveform is real, causal, Fourier-transformable, and also satisfies the proposed k(f)-dependent 'CLDP criterion'. The forward and inverse CLDP IEs corresponding to a particular CLDP material model k(f) therefore comprise a particular integral transform relationship applicable to waveforms satisfying the CLDP criterion for that material. The CLDP transform relationship for a lossless/dispersionless material reduces to the (unilateral) Fourier transform. Even without noise, the 'inverse CLDP'-recovered waveform gleaned from an abruptly bandlimited CLDP response signal requires regularization - a generalized Gibbs-Dirichlet kernel dubbed 'the Darrell' comes into effect. The measured (time sampled) PESAW signal is necessarily bandlimited; this thesis investigates regularization via lowpass filtering of the measured signal. Both synthetic and experimental examples are investigated. The focus is on MHz-range signals culled from mm-range polymeric PESAW experiments. A method for determining the requisite model k(f) from measured PESAW signals is also presented and employed. by R. Joseph Lyons. Ph.D. 2009-10-01T15:35:09Z 2009-10-01T15:35:09Z 1998 1998 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/47722 42429781 eng M.I.T. theses are protected by copyright. They may be viewed from this source for any purpose, but reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without written permission. See provided URL for inquiries about permission. http://dspace.mit.edu/handle/1721.1/7582 291 p. application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
spellingShingle Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Lyons, Robert Joseph, 1963-
Determining distributed source waveforms in casual, lossy, dispersive, plane-wave (CLDP) materials
description Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 1998. === Includes bibliographical references (p. 284-291). === This thesis presents and employs novel mathematics for the inversion of linear, first-kind Fredholm integral equations (IEs) which have a time t dependent response signal, a space z dependent source waveform, and a kernel with time dependence (at each z) corresponding to the impulse response of a thickness z slab of causal, lossy, dispersive, homogeneous material through which planar disturbances propagate according to the wave equation. These materials are called CLDP materials; these IEs are called CLDP IEs. These novel mathematics are applicable to the PESAW (aka PEA) charge recovery method. The proposed inversion method recognizes that the (temporal) Fourier transform of a CLDP IE's response signal can be interpreted as the values of the (spatial) Laplace transform of that IE's source waveform along a Laplace plane path determined by the material's propagation wavenumber k(f). Executing the Laplace transform inversion integral along this CLDP path yields an inverse CLDP IE which recovers the true source waveform provided that source waveform is real, causal, Fourier-transformable, and also satisfies the proposed k(f)-dependent 'CLDP criterion'. The forward and inverse CLDP IEs corresponding to a particular CLDP material model k(f) therefore comprise a particular integral transform relationship applicable to waveforms satisfying the CLDP criterion for that material. The CLDP transform relationship for a lossless/dispersionless material reduces to the (unilateral) Fourier transform. Even without noise, the 'inverse CLDP'-recovered waveform gleaned from an abruptly bandlimited CLDP response signal requires regularization - a generalized Gibbs-Dirichlet kernel dubbed 'the Darrell' comes into effect. The measured (time sampled) PESAW signal is necessarily bandlimited; this thesis investigates regularization via lowpass filtering of the measured signal. Both synthetic and experimental examples are investigated. The focus is on MHz-range signals culled from mm-range polymeric PESAW experiments. A method for determining the requisite model k(f) from measured PESAW signals is also presented and employed. === by R. Joseph Lyons. === Ph.D.
author2 Chatham M. Cooke.
author_facet Chatham M. Cooke.
Lyons, Robert Joseph, 1963-
author Lyons, Robert Joseph, 1963-
author_sort Lyons, Robert Joseph, 1963-
title Determining distributed source waveforms in casual, lossy, dispersive, plane-wave (CLDP) materials
title_short Determining distributed source waveforms in casual, lossy, dispersive, plane-wave (CLDP) materials
title_full Determining distributed source waveforms in casual, lossy, dispersive, plane-wave (CLDP) materials
title_fullStr Determining distributed source waveforms in casual, lossy, dispersive, plane-wave (CLDP) materials
title_full_unstemmed Determining distributed source waveforms in casual, lossy, dispersive, plane-wave (CLDP) materials
title_sort determining distributed source waveforms in casual, lossy, dispersive, plane-wave (cldp) materials
publisher Massachusetts Institute of Technology
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/47722
work_keys_str_mv AT lyonsrobertjoseph1963 determiningdistributedsourcewaveformsincasuallossydispersiveplanewavecldpmaterials
_version_ 1719035579774009344