Prentice Hall, 2000, 601 pages, ISBN: 0130030473 9780130030474
The purpose of this book is to introduce the reader to the acoustic wave concepts required for the design of a wide range of acoustic devices, and to discuss some of these devices in detail. The book describes a wide range of classical and more recently developed theoretical methods, such as perturbation and coupled wave theories, and shows how these concepts are applied to understanding the wide range of acoustic devices now being used in practical applications.
Sound Wave Propagation
Waves in Isotropic Media
Wave Propagation with Finite Exciting Sources
Transversal Filters
Stress, Strain, and the Reduced Notation
Acoustic Parameters of Common Materials
Poynting's Theorem in Piezoelectric Media
Determination of the Impedance Z0 in Terms of Δ V/V
A Rigorous Derivation of Normal-Mode Theory
Transducer Admittance Matrix
Method of Stationary Phase
Quasistatic Theory for Fields Inside a Sphere
Rate of Movement of Charge in a CCD Due to Diffusion and Space Charge
Acoustooptic Effect in Anisotropic Crystals