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Meep
Finite-Difference Time-Domain Simulations
Version 2.1.2 - published on 31 Mar 2016
doi:10.4231/D3GB1XJ14 cite this
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Abstract
Meep implements the finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) method for computational electromagnetism. This is a widely used technique in which space is divided into a discrete grid and then the fields are evolved in time using discrete time steps. As the grid and the time steps are made finer and finer, this becomes a closer and closer approximation for the true continuous equations, and one can simulate many practical problems essentially exactly. Though many quantities can be calculated, major applications include transmission and reflection spectra, resonant modes and frequencies, and field pattern.
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References
Ardavan Farjadpour, David Roundy, Alejandro Rodriguez, Mihai Ibanescu, Peter Bermel, J. D. Joannopoulos, Steven G. Johnson, and Geoffrey Burr, "Improving accuracy by subpixel smoothing in FDTD (http://ol.osa.org/abstract.cfm?id=111338)," Optics Letters 31 (20), 2972–2974 (2006).
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