DocumentCode
1022143
Title
Some mathematical considerations in dealing with the inverse problem
Author
Sarkar, T. ; Weiner, D. ; Jain, V.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electrical Eng., Rochester Inst. of Tech., Rochester, NY, USA
Volume
29
Issue
2
fYear
1981
fDate
3/1/1981 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
373
Lastpage
379
Abstract
Many problems of mathematical physics can be formulated in terms of the operator equation
, where
is an integro-differential operator. Given
and
, the solution for
is usually straightforward. However, the inverse problem which consists of the solution for
when given
and
is much more difficult. The following questions relative to the inverse problem are explored. 1) Does specification of the operator
determine the set
for which a solution
is possible? 2) Does the inverse problem always have a unique solution? 3) Do small perturbations of the forcing function
always result in small perturbations of the solution? 4) What are some of the considerations that enter into the choice of a solution technique for a specific problem? The concept of an ill-posed problem versus that of a well-posed problem is discussed. Specifically, the manner by which an ill-posed problem may be regularized to a well-posed problem is presented. The concepts are illustrated by several examples.
, where
is an integro-differential operator. Given
and
, the solution for
is usually straightforward. However, the inverse problem which consists of the solution for
when given
and
is much more difficult. The following questions relative to the inverse problem are explored. 1) Does specification of the operator
determine the set
for which a solution
is possible? 2) Does the inverse problem always have a unique solution? 3) Do small perturbations of the forcing function
always result in small perturbations of the solution? 4) What are some of the considerations that enter into the choice of a solution technique for a specific problem? The concept of an ill-posed problem versus that of a well-posed problem is discussed. Specifically, the manner by which an ill-posed problem may be regularized to a well-posed problem is presented. The concepts are illustrated by several examples.Keywords
Electromagnetic scattering, inverse problem; Integral equations; Matrix inversion; Operator theory; Antenna measurements; Convolution; Frequency; Integral equations; Integrodifferential equations; Inverse problems; Linear systems; Physics; Smoothing methods;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Antennas and Propagation, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-926X
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TAP.1981.1142573
Filename
1142573
Link To Document