Let us apply the properties of the Bessel function to solve the following exterior boundary value (``scattering'') problem:
Find that solution to the Helmholtz equation
in the Euclidean plane which satisfies
plus only outgoing waves, if any; i.e. no incoming waves.
Mathematically the second condition is a type of boundary condition at infinity. It is evident that this boundary condition states that the solution consists of ``plane wave + outgoing wave''. The physical meaning of this condition is that it represents a scattering process.
If the circular
boundary were absent, then there would have been no scattering. The
Dirichlet boundary condition 1. would have been replaced by the regularity
requirement that
finite at
while the second boundary
condition 2. at
would have remained the same.
In that case the resulting ``no scattering''
solution is immediate, namely,
By contrast, if the circular boundary is present as stipulated by the problem, then this solution must be augmented so that the Dirichlet boundary conditions are satisfied,
This augmentation can be implemented with Hankel functions of the first kind, or of the second kind, or with a combination of the two. The boundary condition that the solution represent a plane wave plus a scattered wave, outgoing only, demands that the augmentation have the form
It expresses the requisite outgoing wave condition for
By contrast, at
| 0 | |||
![]() |
It follows that the hard cylinder scattering process yields the modified plane wave
![]() |
|||
![]() |