Long-lived Scattering Resonances and Bragg Structures
Abstract
We consider a system governed by the wave equation with index of refraction n(x), taken to be variable within a bounded region ⊂ Rd, and constant in Rd . The solution of the time-dependent wave equation with initial data, which is localized in , spreads and decays with advancing time. This rate of decay can be measured (for d=1,3, and more generally, d odd) in terms of the eigenvalues of the scattering resonance problem, a non-selfadjoint eigenvalue problem governing the time-harmonic solutions of the wave (Helmholtz) equation which are outgoing at ∞. Specifically, the rate of energy escape from is governed by the complex scattering eigenfrequency, which is closest to the real axis. We study the structural design problem: Find a refractive index profile n*(x) within an admissible class which has a scattering frequency with minimal imaginary part. The admissible class is defined in terms of the compact support of n(x)-1 and pointwise upper and lower (material) bounds on n(x) for x ∈ , i.e., 0 < n- ≤ n(x) ≤ n+ < ∞. We formulate this problem as a constrained optimization problem and prove that an optimal structure, n*(x) exists. Furthermore, n*(x) is piecewise constant and achieves the material bounds, i.e., n*(x) ∈ n-, n+ . In one dimension, we establish a connection between n*(x) and the well-known class of Bragg structures, where n(x) is constant on intervals whose length is one-quarter of the effective wavelength.
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