Getting Extinction cross section from Radar cross section using HFSS

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on using HFSS software to calculate the extinction cross section of a particle, specifically questioning the method of deriving it from the imaginary part of the radar cross section (RCS) at 0 degrees. The user reports obtaining unexpectedly low values, around 1e-13 and negative numbers, when following the RCS tutorial. There is uncertainty about whether simply taking the imaginary part of the RCS is the correct approach for determining the extinction cross section. Additional resources from ResearchGate are referenced for further clarification. The conversation highlights the need for accurate methodologies in electromagnetic simulations.
El Flea
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Hi, Has anyone tried using the HFSS software to get the extinction cross section of a particle?

I've been told that the extinction cross section of a particle is the imaginary part of the radar cross section in forward direction, so I did exactly what the RCS tutorial from HFSS did, except using my own model and frequencies, and getting just the 0deg im(ComplexRCS).
Where, I'm supposed to get results around 1 point something, I got results around 1e-13 and some negative numbers. And it gets even smaller if I divide it by the wavenumber. Was I wrong to just take the imaginary part of the radar cross section in 0deg as the extinction cross section?
 
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Check this answer from another site: https://www.researchgate.net/post/Extinction_cross-section_for_Nano-particle_on_a_film-Lumerical_COMSOL
 
Check this answer from another site: https://www.researchgate.net/post/Extinction_cross-section_for_Nano-particle_on_a_film-Lumerical_COMSOL
 
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