ISBN-13: 9783642224522 / Angielski / Twarda / 2012 / 460 str.
ISBN-13: 9783642224522 / Angielski / Twarda / 2012 / 460 str.
Selected from papers presented at the 8th Scientific Computation in Electrical Engineering conference in Toulouse in 2010, the contributions to this volume cover every angle of numerically modelling electronic and electrical systems, including computational electromagnetics, circuit theory and simulation and device modelling. On computational electromagnetics, the chapters examine cutting-edge material ranging from low-frequency electrical machine modelling problems to issues in high-frequency scattering. Regarding circuit theory and simulation, the book details the most advanced techniques for modelling networks with many thousands of components. Modelling devices at microscopic levels is covered by a number of fundamental mathematical physics papers, while numerous papers on model order reduction help engineers and systems designers to bring their modelling of industrial-scale systems within the reach of present-day computational power. Complementing these more specific papers, the volume also contains a selection of mathematical methods which can be used in any application domain.
This selection of papers presented at the 8-th Scientific Computation in Electrical Engineering conference (SCEE 2010), covers all aspects of the numerical modelling of electronic and electrical systems: computational electromagnetics, circuit theory and simulation and device modelling. §The computational electromagnetics papers present up-to-date information from low-frequency electrical machine modelling problems to high-frequency scattering problems. The papers on circuit theory and simulation present the most advanced techniques for the modelling of networks with many thousands of components. The modelling of devices on the microscopic level is described in a number of fundamental mathematical physics papers. Numerous papers on model order reduction bring the modelling of systems of industrial size within the reach of present day computational power. A number of papers presenting mathematical methods which can be used in any application domain complement the more specific papers.