Metaplectic geometrical optics for ray-based modeling of caustics: Theory and algorithms
N. A. Lopez, I. Y. Dodin

TL;DR
This paper introduces metaplectic geometrical optics (MGO), a novel, computationally efficient method that accurately models wave behavior at caustics, overcoming limitations of traditional geometrical optics in RF system simulations.
Contribution
The paper develops the MGO theory, algorithms, and demonstrates its ability to handle caustics effectively, improving upon previous semiclassical schemes.
Findings
MGO reproduces standard GO far from caustics.
MGO avoids caustic singularities using mixed coordinate representations.
Explicit comparison shows MGO's accuracy in wave spectrum modeling.
Abstract
The optimization of radiofrequency-wave (RF) systems for fusion experiments is often performed using ray-tracing codes, which rely on the geometrical-optics (GO) approximation. However, GO fails at caustics such as cutoffs and focal points, erroneously predicting the wave intensity to be infinite. This is a critical shortcoming of GO, since the caustic wave intensity is often the quantity of interest, e.g. RF heating. Full-wave modeling can be used instead, but the computational cost limits the speed at which such optimizations can be performed. We have developed a less expensive alternative called metaplectic geometrical optics (MGO). Instead of evolving waves in the usual (coordinate) or (spectral) representation, MGO uses a mixed representation. By continuously adjusting the matrix coefficients…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsMagnetic confinement fusion research · Gyrotron and Vacuum Electronics Research · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology
