The following pages link to Michael S. Vogelius (Q311154):
Displaying 39 items.
- (Q206825) (redirect page) (← links)
- Approximate cloaking for the full wave equation via change of variables: the Drude-Lorentz model (Q311155) (← links)
- Uniform asymptotic expansion of the voltage potential in the presence of thin inhomogeneities with arbitrary conductivity (Q523807) (← links)
- Full range scattering estimates and their application to cloaking (Q715372) (← links)
- A new model for thin plates with rapidly varying thickness (Q789215) (← links)
- An inverse problem originating from magnetohydrodynamics (Q809845) (← links)
- (Q1033360) (redirect page) (← links)
- Ivo Babuška - mathematician and engineer (Q1033361) (← links)
- A representation formula for the voltage perturbations caused by diametrically small conductivity inhomogeneities. Proof of uniform validity (Q1044390) (← links)
- Feedback and adaptive finite element solution of one-dimensional boundary value problems (Q1063401) (← links)
- A computational algorithm to determine cracks from electrostatic boundary measurements (Q1197175) (← links)
- A computational algorithm to determine crack locations from electrostatic boundary measurements. The case of multiple cracks (Q1264189) (← links)
- An inverse problem for the equation \(\Delta u=-cu-d\) (Q1341649) (← links)
- Asymptotic formulas for steady state voltage potentials in the presence of thin inhomogeneities. A rigorous error analysis. (Q1415338) (← links)
- Gradient estimates for solutions to divergence form elliptic equations with discontinuous coefficients (Q1578960) (← links)
- Asymptotic formulas for perturbations in the electromagnetic fields due to the presence of inhomogeneities of small diameter. II: The full Maxwell equations. (Q1606251) (← links)
- Identification of small inhomogeneities of extreme conductivity by boundary measurements: A theorem on continuous dependence (Q1825383) (← links)
- A right-inverse for divergence operator in spaces of piecewise polynomials. Application to the p-version of the finite element method (Q1836289) (← links)
- An analysis of the p-version of the finite element method for nearly incompressible materials. Uniformly valid, optimal error estimates (Q1836290) (← links)
- A direct impedance tomography algorithm for locating small inhomogeneities (Q1865741) (← links)
- Approximate cloaking using transformation optics for acoustic and electromagnetic waves (Q1987359) (← links)
- Small perturbations in the type of boundary conditions for an elliptic operator (Q2085758) (← links)
- A MUSIC-type algorithm for detecting internal corrosion from electrostatic boundary measure\-ments (Q2480883) (← links)
- Existence and blow up of solutions to certain classes of two-dimensional nonlinear Neumann problems (Q2507957) (← links)
- On the regularity of non-scattering anisotropic inhomogeneities (Q2697532) (← links)
- Approximate Cloaking for the Full Wave Equation via Change of Variables (Q2902743) (← links)
- Precise bounds for finite time blowup of solutions to very general one-space-dimensional nonlinear Neumann problems (Q2995455) (← links)
- Transient behavior of solutions to a class of nonlinear boundary value problems (Q3015258) (← links)
- (Q3031389) (← links)
- A Backprojection Algorithm for Electrical Impedance Imaging (Q3033268) (← links)
- (Q3327878) (← links)
- (Q4695265) (← links)
- Erratum: Cloaking via change of variables for the Helmholtz equation (Q4933096) (← links)
- On optimal cloaking-by-mapping transformations (Q5061505) (← links)
- Elliptic estimates in composite media with smooth inclusions: an integral equation approach (Q5261701) (← links)
- Imagerie électromagnétique de petites inhomogénéités (Q5458454) (← links)
- Singularities almost always scatter: Regularity results for non‐scattering inhomogeneities (Q6082692) (← links)
- Reconstruction of Cracks in Calderón’s Inverse Conductivity Problem Using Energy Comparisons (Q6150507) (← links)
- Far field broadband approximate cloaking for the Helmholtz equation with a Drude-Lorentz refractive index (Q6188320) (← links)