Numerical Methods for Inverse Problems
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More About This Title Numerical Methods for Inverse Problems

English

This book studies methods to concretely address inverse problems. An inverse problem arises when the causes that produced a given effect must be determined or when one seeks to indirectly estimate the parameters of a physical system.

The author uses practical examples to illustrate inverse problems in physical sciences. He presents the techniques and specific methods chosen to solve inverse problems in a general domain of application, choosing to focus on a small number of methods that can be used in most applications.

This book is aimed at readers with a mathematical and scientific computing background. Despite this, it is a book with a practical perspective. The methods described are applicable, have been applied, and are often illustrated by numerical examples.

English

Michel Kern is a research scientist in the Serena group at the Inria Research Center in Paris, France

English

Preface ix

Part 1. Introduction and Examples 1

Chapter 1. Overview of Inverse Problems 3

1.1. Direct and inverse problems 3

1.2. Well-posed and ill-posed problems 4

Chapter 2. Examples of Inverse Problems  9

2.1. Inverse problems in heat transfer 10

2.2. Inverse problems in hydrogeology 13

2.3. Inverse problems in seismic exploration 16

2.4. Medical imaging 21

2.5. Other examples 25

Part 2. Linear Inverse Problems 29

Chapter 3. Integral Operators and Integral Equations  31

3.1. Definition and first properties 31

3.2. Discretization of integral equations 36

3.2.1. Discretization by quadrature–collocation 36

3.2.2. Discretization by the Galerkin method 39

3.3. Exercises 42

Chapter 4. Linear Least Squares Problems – Singular Value Decomposition 45

4.1. Mathematical properties of least squares problems 45

4.1.1. Finite dimensional case 50

4.2. Singular value decomposition for matrices 52

4.3. Singular value expansion for compact operators 57

4.4. Applications of the SVD to least squares problems 60

4.4.1. The matrix case 60

4.4.2. The operator case 63

4.5. Exercises 65

Chapter 5. Regularization of Linear Inverse Problems 71

5.1. Tikhonov’s method 72

5.1.1. Presentation 72

5.1.2. Convergence 73

5.1.3. The L-curve 81

5.2. Applications of the SVE 83

5.2.1. SVE and Tikhonov’s method 84

5.2.2. Regularization by truncated SVE 85

5.3. Choice of the regularization parameter 88

5.3.1. Morozov’s discrepancy principle 88

5.3.2. The L-curve 91

5.3.3. Numerical methods 92

5.4. Iterative methods 94

5.5. Exercises 98

Part 3. Nonlinear Inverse Problems 103

Chapter 6. Nonlinear Inverse Problems – Generalities 105

6.1. The three fundamental spaces 106

6.2. Least squares formulation 111

6.2.1. Difficulties of inverse problems 114

6.2.2. Optimization, parametrization, discretization 114

6.3. Methods for computing the gradient – the adjoint state method 116

6.3.1. The finite difference method 116

6.3.2. Sensitivity functions 118

6.3.3. The adjoint state method 119

6.3.4. Computation of the adjoint state by the Lagrangian 120

6.3.5. The inner product test 123

6.4. Parametrization and general organization  123

6.5. Exercises 125

Chapter 7. Some Parameter Estimation Examples 127

7.1. Elliptic equation in one dimension  127

7.1.1. Computation of the gradient 128

7.2. Stationary diffusion: elliptic equation in two dimensions 129

7.2.1. Computation of the gradient: application of the general method 132

7.2.2. Computation of the gradient by the Lagrangian 134

7.2.3. The inner product test 135

7.2.4. Multiscale parametrization 135

7.2.5. Example 136

7.3. Ordinary differential equations 137

7.3.1. An application example  144

7.4. Transient diffusion: heat equation 147

7.5. Exercises 152

Chapter 8. Further Information 155

8.1. Regularization in other norms 155

8.1.1. Sobolev semi-norms 155

8.1.2. Bounded variation regularization norm 157

8.2. Statistical approach: Bayesian inversion 157

8.2.1. Least squares and statistics 158

8.2.2. Bayesian inversion 160

8.3. Other topics 163

8.3.1. Theoretical aspects: identifiability 163

8.3.2. Algorithmic differentiation . 163

8.3.3. Iterative methods and large-scale problems 164

8.3.4. Software  164

Appendices 167

Appendix 1 169

Appendix 2 183

Appendix 3 193

Bibliography 205

Index 213

English

"The book is very carefully written, in a reader-friendly style. It can be considered as an introductory textbook for the theory of ill-posed problems and their numerical solution." (Mathematical Reviews/MathSciNet 11/05/2017)

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