Ray Theory of Waves
Kuan Fang Ren, Qingwei Duan, Claude Roz\'e, Minglin Yang, Ce Zhang,, Haiping Fang, and Xiang'e Han

TL;DR
The paper introduces the Ray Theory of Waves (RTW), a novel method that incorporates wavefront curvature into ray tracing to accurately predict 3D wave fields around complex objects, addressing limitations of existing techniques.
Contribution
RTW is a new theoretical framework that combines differential geometry with wavefront analysis, enabling precise wave field calculations including diffraction effects.
Findings
Demonstrated accurate 3D scattering pattern calculations for an ellipsoidal drop.
Clarified longstanding questions related to Airy theory since the 19th century.
Showed improved accuracy and efficiency over traditional methods.
Abstract
Accurate and efficient prediction of three-dimensional (3D) fields in wave interactions with large, complex-shaped objects is essential for applications in electromagnetic computation, computer graphics, optical metrology, and freeform optics. However, existing methods face significant challenges: numerical techniques are computationally intensive and impractical for large objects, while ray tracing neglects wave properties and remains inefficient, relying solely on ray bundles. In this Letter, we present the Ray Theory of Waves (RTW), which introduces wavefront curvature (WFC) as an intrinsic property of a ray to describe wave divergence and convergence. Using differential geometry, we derive the wavefront equation, rigorously relating WFC of incident, reflected, and refracted waves, enabling accurate calculation of field amplitude and phase along a ray. To address diffraction effects…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeophysics and Sensor Technology
