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Note that the cylindrical tube is a limiting case of a cone with its
apex at infinity. Correspondingly, a plane wave is a limiting case of
a spherical wave having infinite radius.
On a fundamental level, all pressure waves in 3D space are composed of
spherical waves [360]. You may have learned about the
Huygens-Fresnel principle in a physics class when
it covered waves [297]. The Huygens-Fresnel principle states that the
propagation of any wavefront can be modeled as the superposition of
spherical waves emanating from all points along the wavefront
[122, page 344]. This principle is especially
valuable for intuitively understanding diffraction and related
phenomena such as mode conversion (which happens, for example,
when a plane wave in a horn hits a sharp bend or obstruction and
breaks up into other kinds of waves in the horn).
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