High-frequency approximation
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A high frequency approximation (or "high energy approximation") for scattering, in physics or engineering, is an approximation whose accuracy increases with the size of features on the scatterer relative to the wavelength of the scattered particles.
Classical mechanics and geometric optics are the most common and extreme high frequency approximation, where wave properties of, respectively, quantum mechanics and electromagnetism are neglected entirely.
Less extreme approximations include, the WKB approximation, Physical Optics, the Geometric Theory of Diffraction and the Uniform Theory of Diffraction. When these are used to approximate quantum mechanics are called Semiclassical.