Efficient steady-state analysis based on matrix-free Krylov-subspace methods
DAC '95 Proceedings of the 32nd annual ACM/IEEE Design Automation Conference
Efficient AC and noise analysis of two-tone RF circuits
DAC '96 Proceedings of the 33rd annual Design Automation Conference
Efficient full-wave electromagnetic analysis via model-order reduction of fast integral transforms
DAC '96 Proceedings of the 33rd annual Design Automation Conference
Efficient time-domain simulation of frequency-dependent elements
Proceedings of the 1996 IEEE/ACM international conference on Computer-aided design
Lumped interconnect models via Gaussian quadrature
DAC '97 Proceedings of the 34th annual Design Automation Conference
Efficient methods for simulating highly nonlinear multi-rate circuits
DAC '97 Proceedings of the 34th annual Design Automation Conference
Iterative Methods for Sparse Linear Systems
Iterative Methods for Sparse Linear Systems
Efficient linear circuit analysis by Pade approximation via the Lanczos process
IEEE Transactions on Computer-Aided Design of Integrated Circuits and Systems
Device-level early floorplanning algorithms for RF circuits
ISPD '98 Proceedings of the 1998 international symposium on Physical design
Proceedings of the conference on Design, automation and test in Europe
CAD solutions and outstanding challenges for mixed-signal and RFIC design
Proceedings of the 2001 IEEE/ACM international conference on Computer-aided design
An accelerated Poincaré-map method for autonomous oscillators
Applied Mathematics and Computation
SystemC-AMS Requirements, Design Objectives and Rationale
DATE '03 Proceedings of the conference on Design, Automation and Test in Europe - Volume 1
Proceedings of the 2005 joint conference on Smart objects and ambient intelligence: innovative context-aware services: usages and technologies
Bibliography on cyclostationarity
Signal Processing
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The principles employed in the development of modern RF simulators are introduced and the various techniques currently in use, or expected to be in use in the next few years, are surveyed. Frequency and time domain techniques are presented and contrasted, as are steady state and envelope techniques and large and small signal techniques.