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EM.Tempo

80 bytes added, 12:46, 30 July 2015
/* An Overview of FDTD Modeling */
[[Basic FDTD Theory]]
[[Image:Info_icon.png|40px]] Click here to learn more about the '''[[Basic_FDTD_Theory#Differential_Form_of_Maxwell.27s_Equations_.26_the_Yee_Cell | Differential_Form_of_Maxwell's_Equations | Differential Form of Maxwell's Equations & the Yee Cell]]'''.
Since FDTD is a finite domain numerical technique, the computational domain of the problem must be truncated. At the boundaries of the computational domain, proper boundary conditions must be enforced. In a shielded structure, all objects are enclosed within a perfect electric (or magnetic) conductor box. In an open boundary problem like an antenna, some kind of absorbing boundary conditions such as a perfectly matched layer (PML) must be used to emulate the free space. The absorbing boundaries should act such that the field propagates through them without any back reflection. The FDTD simulation time depends directly on the size of the computational domain and on how close you can place the PML walls to the enclosed objects.
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