4.7 Article

The reflectionless properties of Toeplitz waves and Hankel waves: An analysis via Bessel functions

Journal

APPLIED MATHEMATICS AND COMPUTATION
Volume 389, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.amc.2020.125576

Keywords

Toeplitz waves; Hankel waves; One-way waves; Bessel functions; Matrix functions

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This study examines the reflectionless properties of the wave equation at boundaries in one space dimension and time, focusing on Toeplitz waves and Hankel waves. It finds exact formulae for these waves and demonstrates their reflectionless behavior on even and odd traversals. The analysis also introduces a new method of computer simulation for controlling the number of reflections in advance.
We study reflectionless properties at the boundary for the wave equation in one space dimension and time, in terms of a well-known matrix that arises from a simple discretisation of space. It is known that all matrix functions of the familiar second difference matrix representing the Laplacian in this setting are the sum of a Toeplitz matrix and a Hankel matrix. The solution to the wave equation is one such matrix function. Here, we study the behaviour of the corresponding waves that we call Toeplitz waves and Hankel waves. We show that these waves can be written as certain linear combinations of even Bessel functions of the first kind. We find exact and explicit formulae for these waves. We also show that the Toeplitz and Hankel waves are reflectionless on even, respectively odd, traversals of the domain. Our analysis naturally suggests a new method of computer simulation that allows control, so that it is possible to choose - in advance - the number of reflections. An attractive result that comes out of our analysis is the appearance of the well-known shift matrix, and also other matrices that might be thought of as Hankel versions of the shift matrix. By revealing the algebraic structure of the solution in terms of shift matrices, we make it clear how the Toeplitz and Hankel waves are indeed reflectionless at the boundary on even or odd traversals. Although the subject of the reflectionless boundary condition has a long history, we believe the point of view that we adopt here in terms of matrix functions is new. (C) 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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