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Inverse Problems for Partial Differential Equations / by Victor Isakov
(Applied Mathematical Sciences. ISSN:2196968X ; 127)

Edition 1st ed. 1998.
Publisher (New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer)
Year 1998
Language English
Size XI, 286 p. 1 illus : online resource
Authors *Isakov, Victor author
SpringerLink (Online service)
Subjects LCSH:Mathematical analysis
LCSH:Mathematics -- Data processing  All Subject Search
LCSH:Mathematical physics
FREE:Analysis
FREE:Computational Mathematics and Numerical Analysis
FREE:Theoretical, Mathematical and Computational Physics
Notes 1 Inverse Problems -- 2 Ill-Posed Problems and Regularization -- 3 Uniqueness and Stability in the Cauchy Problem -- 4 Elliptic Equations: Single Boundary Measurements -- 5 Elliptic Equations: Many Boundary Measurements -- 6 Scattering Problems -- 7 Integral Geometry and Tomography -- 8 Hyperbolic Equations -- 9 Parabolic Equations -- 10 Some Numerical Methods -- Appendix. Functional Spaces -- References
This book describes the contemporary state of the theory and some numerical aspects of inverse problems in partial differential equations. The topic is of sub­ stantial and growing interest for many scientists and engineers, and accordingly to graduate students in these areas. Mathematically, these problems are relatively new and quite challenging due to the lack of conventional stability and to nonlinearity and nonconvexity. Applications include recovery of inclusions from anomalies of their gravitational fields; reconstruction of the interior of the human body from exterior electrical, ultrasonic, and magnetic measurements, recovery of interior structural parameters of detail of machines and of the underground from similar data (non-destructive evaluation); and locating flying or navigated objects from their acoustic or electromagnetic fields. Currently, there are hundreds of publica­ tions containing new and interesting results. A purpose of the book is to collect and present many of them in a readable and informative form. Rigorous proofs are presented whenever they are relatively short and can be demonstrated by quite general mathematical techniques. Also, we prefer to present results that from our point of view contain fresh and promising ideas. In some cases there is no com­ plete mathematical theory, so we give only available results. We do not assume that a reader possesses an enormous mathematical technique. In fact, a moderate knowledge of partial differential equations, of the Fourier transform, and of basic functional analysis will suffice
HTTP:URL=https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4899-0030-2
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Springer eBooks 9781489900302
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Material Type E-Book
Classification LCC:QA299.6-433
DC23:515
ID 4000107219
ISBN 9781489900302

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