Application of mixed formulations of quasi-reversibility to solve ill-posed problems for heat and wave equations: the 1D case (Q256089): Difference between revisions

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This is a fairly extensive body of work on numerical aspects around the quasi-reversibility method, which was introduced in the seminal monograph by \textit{R. Lattès} and \textit{J. L. Lions} [Méthode de quasi-réversibilité et applications. Paris: Dunod (1967; Zbl 0159.20803)]. Regularization of ill-posed problems is a wide field and the methods for finding stable approximate solutions are mostly rather generally applicable, like in the cases of Tikhonov and Lavrent'ev regularization as variants of variational regularization or in diverse forms of iterative regularization. But it is a piece of luck if one has an adapted and appropriate method for a specific problem class. This is just the case for regularizing the heat equation problem backward in time and similar problems of the wave equation when the quasi-reversibility method is applied. The singular perturbation of second order differential operators by higher (e.g. fourth) order differential operators delivers stabilization and convergence if the regularization parameter tends to zero, but unfortunately the numerical implementation by exploiting finite element techniques is much more complicated in such a case. In order to avoid exotic finite elements (e.g. of Hermitian type), which are not always available in numerical codes, the authors introduce and extend so-called mixed formulations for solving the inverse problems in the context of heat and wave equations. The focus is on the 1D case taking into account that this is a toy problem for a possible future extension to higher dimensions. After a helpful introduction the Section 2 presents first the mixed formulation approach for the backward heat equation and then an adaption to the heat equation with lateral Cauchy data. In a third subsection of Section 2 the inverse obstacle problem is discussed, whereas Section 3 is devoted to ill-posed problems for the wave equation. Also for the wave equation with lateral data the solution is based on the presentation of a mixed formulation. The paper is completed by Section 4 on the discretization of the suggested mixed formulations and Section 5 presenting numerical case studies.
Property / review text: This is a fairly extensive body of work on numerical aspects around the quasi-reversibility method, which was introduced in the seminal monograph by \textit{R. Lattès} and \textit{J. L. Lions} [Méthode de quasi-réversibilité et applications. Paris: Dunod (1967; Zbl 0159.20803)]. Regularization of ill-posed problems is a wide field and the methods for finding stable approximate solutions are mostly rather generally applicable, like in the cases of Tikhonov and Lavrent'ev regularization as variants of variational regularization or in diverse forms of iterative regularization. But it is a piece of luck if one has an adapted and appropriate method for a specific problem class. This is just the case for regularizing the heat equation problem backward in time and similar problems of the wave equation when the quasi-reversibility method is applied. The singular perturbation of second order differential operators by higher (e.g. fourth) order differential operators delivers stabilization and convergence if the regularization parameter tends to zero, but unfortunately the numerical implementation by exploiting finite element techniques is much more complicated in such a case. In order to avoid exotic finite elements (e.g. of Hermitian type), which are not always available in numerical codes, the authors introduce and extend so-called mixed formulations for solving the inverse problems in the context of heat and wave equations. The focus is on the 1D case taking into account that this is a toy problem for a possible future extension to higher dimensions. After a helpful introduction the Section 2 presents first the mixed formulation approach for the backward heat equation and then an adaption to the heat equation with lateral Cauchy data. In a third subsection of Section 2 the inverse obstacle problem is discussed, whereas Section 3 is devoted to ill-posed problems for the wave equation. Also for the wave equation with lateral data the solution is based on the presentation of a mixed formulation. The paper is completed by Section 4 on the discretization of the suggested mixed formulations and Section 5 presenting numerical case studies. / rank
 
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Property / reviewed by: Bernd Hofmann / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 65M32 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 35K20 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 35L20 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 35R25 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 35R30 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 65M30 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 65M60 / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH DE Number: 6552765 / rank
 
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inverse problems
Property / zbMATH Keywords: inverse problems / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
quasi-reversibility method
Property / zbMATH Keywords: quasi-reversibility method / rank
 
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backward heat equation
Property / zbMATH Keywords: backward heat equation / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
wave equation with lateral data
Property / zbMATH Keywords: wave equation with lateral data / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
inverse obstacle problem
Property / zbMATH Keywords: inverse obstacle problem / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
mixed formulation
Property / zbMATH Keywords: mixed formulation / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
finite element method
Property / zbMATH Keywords: finite element method / rank
 
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Revision as of 12:22, 27 June 2023

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Application of mixed formulations of quasi-reversibility to solve ill-posed problems for heat and wave equations: the 1D case
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    Application of mixed formulations of quasi-reversibility to solve ill-posed problems for heat and wave equations: the 1D case (English)
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    9 March 2016
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    This is a fairly extensive body of work on numerical aspects around the quasi-reversibility method, which was introduced in the seminal monograph by \textit{R. Lattès} and \textit{J. L. Lions} [Méthode de quasi-réversibilité et applications. Paris: Dunod (1967; Zbl 0159.20803)]. Regularization of ill-posed problems is a wide field and the methods for finding stable approximate solutions are mostly rather generally applicable, like in the cases of Tikhonov and Lavrent'ev regularization as variants of variational regularization or in diverse forms of iterative regularization. But it is a piece of luck if one has an adapted and appropriate method for a specific problem class. This is just the case for regularizing the heat equation problem backward in time and similar problems of the wave equation when the quasi-reversibility method is applied. The singular perturbation of second order differential operators by higher (e.g. fourth) order differential operators delivers stabilization and convergence if the regularization parameter tends to zero, but unfortunately the numerical implementation by exploiting finite element techniques is much more complicated in such a case. In order to avoid exotic finite elements (e.g. of Hermitian type), which are not always available in numerical codes, the authors introduce and extend so-called mixed formulations for solving the inverse problems in the context of heat and wave equations. The focus is on the 1D case taking into account that this is a toy problem for a possible future extension to higher dimensions. After a helpful introduction the Section 2 presents first the mixed formulation approach for the backward heat equation and then an adaption to the heat equation with lateral Cauchy data. In a third subsection of Section 2 the inverse obstacle problem is discussed, whereas Section 3 is devoted to ill-posed problems for the wave equation. Also for the wave equation with lateral data the solution is based on the presentation of a mixed formulation. The paper is completed by Section 4 on the discretization of the suggested mixed formulations and Section 5 presenting numerical case studies.
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    inverse problems
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    quasi-reversibility method
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    backward heat equation
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    wave equation with lateral data
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    inverse obstacle problem
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    mixed formulation
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    finite element method
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