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JOURNALS // Zapiski Nauchnykh Seminarov POMI // Archive

Zap. Nauchn. Sem. POMI, 2018 Volume 471, Pages 38–58 (Mi znsl6623)

This article is cited in 4 papers

Simplest test for two-dimensional dynamical inverse problem (the BC-method)

M. I. Belishev, N. A. Karazeeva

St. Petersburg Department of Steklov Mathematical Institute of Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg, Russia

Abstract: A dynamical system
\begin{align*} &u_{tt}-\Delta u-\nabla\ln\rho\cdot\nabla u=0&&\text{in}\quad\mathbb R^2_+\times(0,T)\\ &u|_{t=0}=u_t|_{t=0}=0&&\text{in}\quad\mathbb R^2_+\\ &u_y|_{y=0}=f&&\text{for}\quad0\leqslant t\leqslant T, \end{align*}
is under consideration, where $\mathbb R^2_+:=\{(x,y)\in\mathbb R^2\mid y>0\}$; $\rho=\rho(x,y)$ is a smooth positive function; $f=f(x,t)$ is a boundary control; $u=u^f(x,y,t)$ is a solution. With the system one associates a response operator $R\colon f\mapsto u^f|_{y=0}$. The inverse problem is to recover the function $\rho$ via the response operator. The short presentation of the local version of the BC-method, which recovers $\rho$ via the data given on a part of the boundary, is provided.
If $\rho$ is constant, the forward problem is solved in explicit form. In the paper, the corresponding representations for the solutions and response operator are derived. The way to use them for testing the BC-algorithm, which solves the inverse problem, is outlined. The goal of the paper is to extend the circle of the BC-method users, which are interested in numerical realization of methods for solving inverse problems.

Key words and phrases: $2$-dim dynamical inverse problem, BC-method, numerical testing, simplest test.

UDC: 517

Received: 19.10.2018


 English version:
Journal of Mathematical Sciences (New York), 2019, 243:5, 656–670

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