1994
DOI: 10.1088/0305-4470/27/17/029
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Kirchhoff diffractals

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Cited by 20 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…They can be evaluated from slope and offset of the 1-D spectrum. For fractal surfaces, the curves of the backscattering coefficient as a function of the incidence angle are of variable shape and may in certain cases deviate significantly from the patterns observed for stationary surfaces [23]. Dependent on spectral slope and offset, the function reveals a behavior typical for stationary surfaces (i.e., decreases with increasing ), has a maximum at angles >0 , or even increases with increasing until .…”
Section: Power-law Surfacesmentioning
confidence: 88%
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“…They can be evaluated from slope and offset of the 1-D spectrum. For fractal surfaces, the curves of the backscattering coefficient as a function of the incidence angle are of variable shape and may in certain cases deviate significantly from the patterns observed for stationary surfaces [23]. Dependent on spectral slope and offset, the function reveals a behavior typical for stationary surfaces (i.e., decreases with increasing ), has a maximum at angles >0 , or even increases with increasing until .…”
Section: Power-law Surfacesmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…In the case of the IEM, a solution for surfaces with power-law spectra is not available at present. Yordanov and Ivanova [23] have studied scattering from perfectly conducting surfaces characterized by a powerlaw spectrum with and without large-scale cutoff. They used the Kirchhoff approximation (neglecting multiple scattering) and assumed that the incident e.m. waves were vertically polarized.…”
Section: Power-law Surfacesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This is often the case at microwave frequencies [41]. First studies on application of KA to fBm surfaces (sometimes approximated by Weierstrass-Mandelbrot functions [42]) date back to the last decades of last century [15,41,43,44]. To summarize the obtained results, we have to preliminarily recall that an fBm surface is a 2D random process whose increments over a fixed distance are zeromean Gaussian with variance…”
Section: Ka Model and Fractal Surfacesmentioning
confidence: 97%