Información del autor
Autor Par Ingelström |
Documentos disponibles escritos por este autor (2)



Título : Computational Electromagnetics Tipo de documento: documento electrónico Autores: Anders Bondeson ; SpringerLink (Online service) ; Rylander, Thomas ; Par Ingelström Editorial: New York, NY : Springer New York Fecha de publicación: 2005 Colección: Texts in Applied Mathematics, ISSN 0939-2475 num. 51 Número de páginas: XXII, 224 p. 74 illus Il.: online resource ISBN/ISSN/DL: 978-0-387-26160-7 Idioma : Inglés (eng) Palabras clave: Mathematics Computer science Applied mathematics Engineering Optics Electrodynamics Electrical engineering Applications of and Computational Science Computing Clasificación: 51 Matemáticas Resumen: Computational Electromagnetics is a young and growing discipline, expanding as a result of the steadily increasing demand for software for the design and analysis of electrical devices. This book introduces three of the most popular numerical methods for simulating electromagnetic fields: the finite difference method, the finite element method and the method of moments. In particular it focuses on how these methods are used to obtain valid approximations to the solutions of Maxwell's equations, using, for example, "staggered grids" and "edge elements." The main goal of the book is to make the reader aware of different sources of errors in numerical computations, and also to provide the tools for assessing the accuracy of numerical methods and their solutions. To reach this goal, convergence analysis, extrapolation, von Neumann stability analysis, and dispersion analysis are introduced and used frequently throughout the book. Another major goal of the book is to provide students with enough practical understanding of the methods so they are able to write simple programs on their own. To achieve this, the book contains several MATLAB programs and detailed description of practical issues such as assembly of finite element matrices and handling of unstructured meshes. Finally, the book aims at making the students well-aware of the strengths and weaknesses of the different methods, so they can decide which method is best for each problem. The intended audience of this text consists of undergraduate and beginning graduate students with basic knowledge of electromagnetic field theory, numerical analysis, and MATLAB-programming Nota de contenido: Convergence -- Finite Differences -- Eigenvalues -- The Finite-Difference Time-Domain Method -- The Finite Element Method -- The Method of Moments -- Summary and Overview En línea: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/b136922 Link: https://biblioteca.cunef.edu/gestion/catalogo/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=35094 Computational Electromagnetics [documento electrónico] / Anders Bondeson ; SpringerLink (Online service) ; Rylander, Thomas ; Par Ingelström . - New York, NY : Springer New York, 2005 . - XXII, 224 p. 74 illus : online resource. - (Texts in Applied Mathematics, ISSN 0939-2475; 51) .
ISBN : 978-0-387-26160-7
Idioma : Inglés (eng)
Palabras clave: Mathematics Computer science Applied mathematics Engineering Optics Electrodynamics Electrical engineering Applications of and Computational Science Computing Clasificación: 51 Matemáticas Resumen: Computational Electromagnetics is a young and growing discipline, expanding as a result of the steadily increasing demand for software for the design and analysis of electrical devices. This book introduces three of the most popular numerical methods for simulating electromagnetic fields: the finite difference method, the finite element method and the method of moments. In particular it focuses on how these methods are used to obtain valid approximations to the solutions of Maxwell's equations, using, for example, "staggered grids" and "edge elements." The main goal of the book is to make the reader aware of different sources of errors in numerical computations, and also to provide the tools for assessing the accuracy of numerical methods and their solutions. To reach this goal, convergence analysis, extrapolation, von Neumann stability analysis, and dispersion analysis are introduced and used frequently throughout the book. Another major goal of the book is to provide students with enough practical understanding of the methods so they are able to write simple programs on their own. To achieve this, the book contains several MATLAB programs and detailed description of practical issues such as assembly of finite element matrices and handling of unstructured meshes. Finally, the book aims at making the students well-aware of the strengths and weaknesses of the different methods, so they can decide which method is best for each problem. The intended audience of this text consists of undergraduate and beginning graduate students with basic knowledge of electromagnetic field theory, numerical analysis, and MATLAB-programming Nota de contenido: Convergence -- Finite Differences -- Eigenvalues -- The Finite-Difference Time-Domain Method -- The Finite Element Method -- The Method of Moments -- Summary and Overview En línea: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/b136922 Link: https://biblioteca.cunef.edu/gestion/catalogo/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=35094 Ejemplares
Signatura Medio Ubicación Sub-localización Sección Estado ningún ejemplar
Título : Computational Electromagnetics Tipo de documento: documento electrónico Autores: Rylander, Thomas ; SpringerLink (Online service) ; Par Ingelström ; Anders Bondeson Editorial: New York, NY : Springer New York Fecha de publicación: 2013 Otro editor: Imprint: Springer Colección: Texts in Applied Mathematics, ISSN 0939-2475 Número de páginas: XX, 288 p Il.: online resource ISBN/ISSN/DL: 978-1-4614-5351-2 Idioma : Inglés (eng) Palabras clave: Mathematics Applied mathematics Engineering Computer Numerical analysis Electrical engineering Computational Science and Analysis Applications of Clasificación: 51 Matemáticas Resumen: Computational Electromagnetics is a young and growing discipline, expanding as a result of the steadily increasing demand for software for the design and analysis of electrical devices. This book introduces three of the most popular numerical methods for simulating electromagnetic fields: the finite difference method, the finite element method and the method of moments. In particular it focuses on how these methods are used to obtain valid approximations to the solutions of Maxwell's equations, using, for example, "staggered grids" and "edge elements." The main goal of the book is to make the reader aware of different sources of errors in numerical computations, and also to provide the tools for assessing the accuracy of numerical methods and their solutions. To reach this goal, convergence analysis, extrapolation, von Neumann stability analysis, and dispersion analysis are introduced and used frequently throughout the book. Another major goal of the book is to provide students with enough practical understanding of the methods so they are able to write simple programs on their own. To achieve this, the book contains several MATLAB programs and detailed description of practical issues such as assembly of finite element matrices and handling of unstructured meshes. Finally, the book summarizes the strengths and weaknessesof the different methods to help the student decide which method may be best for each problem. In this second edition the book was updated throughout and extensive computer projects are included. Reviews of previous edition: "This well-written monograph is devoted to students at the undergraduate level, but is also useful for practising engineers." (Zentralblatt MATH, 2007) Nota de contenido: Introduction -- Convergence -- Finite Differences -- Eigenvalues -- The Finite-Difference Time-Domain Method -- The Finite Element Method -- The Method of Moments -- Summary and Overview.- Large Linear Systems -- Krylov Methods En línea: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-5351-2 Link: https://biblioteca.cunef.edu/gestion/catalogo/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=32251 Computational Electromagnetics [documento electrónico] / Rylander, Thomas ; SpringerLink (Online service) ; Par Ingelström ; Anders Bondeson . - New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer, 2013 . - XX, 288 p : online resource. - (Texts in Applied Mathematics, ISSN 0939-2475) .
ISBN : 978-1-4614-5351-2
Idioma : Inglés (eng)
Palabras clave: Mathematics Applied mathematics Engineering Computer Numerical analysis Electrical engineering Computational Science and Analysis Applications of Clasificación: 51 Matemáticas Resumen: Computational Electromagnetics is a young and growing discipline, expanding as a result of the steadily increasing demand for software for the design and analysis of electrical devices. This book introduces three of the most popular numerical methods for simulating electromagnetic fields: the finite difference method, the finite element method and the method of moments. In particular it focuses on how these methods are used to obtain valid approximations to the solutions of Maxwell's equations, using, for example, "staggered grids" and "edge elements." The main goal of the book is to make the reader aware of different sources of errors in numerical computations, and also to provide the tools for assessing the accuracy of numerical methods and their solutions. To reach this goal, convergence analysis, extrapolation, von Neumann stability analysis, and dispersion analysis are introduced and used frequently throughout the book. Another major goal of the book is to provide students with enough practical understanding of the methods so they are able to write simple programs on their own. To achieve this, the book contains several MATLAB programs and detailed description of practical issues such as assembly of finite element matrices and handling of unstructured meshes. Finally, the book summarizes the strengths and weaknessesof the different methods to help the student decide which method may be best for each problem. In this second edition the book was updated throughout and extensive computer projects are included. Reviews of previous edition: "This well-written monograph is devoted to students at the undergraduate level, but is also useful for practising engineers." (Zentralblatt MATH, 2007) Nota de contenido: Introduction -- Convergence -- Finite Differences -- Eigenvalues -- The Finite-Difference Time-Domain Method -- The Finite Element Method -- The Method of Moments -- Summary and Overview.- Large Linear Systems -- Krylov Methods En línea: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-5351-2 Link: https://biblioteca.cunef.edu/gestion/catalogo/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=32251 Ejemplares
Signatura Medio Ubicación Sub-localización Sección Estado ningún ejemplar