A remark on finding the coefficient of the dissipative boundary condition via the enclosure method in the time domain
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Publication:2977980
DOI10.1002/mma.4021zbMath1364.35435arXiv1511.04163OpenAlexW3104324773MaRDI QIDQ2977980
Publication date: 21 April 2017
Published in: Mathematical Methods in the Applied Sciences (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1511.04163
wave equationenclosure methodremote sensingdissipative boundary conditioninverse back-scatteringinverse obstacle-scattering problem
Related Items (6)
On finding a cavity in a thermoelastic body using a single displacement measurement over a finite time interval on the surface of the body ⋮ The enclosure method for inverse obstacle scattering over a finite time interval: IV. extraction from a single point on the graph of the response operator ⋮ On finding a penetrable obstacle using a single electromagnetic wave in the time domain ⋮ Extracting discontinuity using the probe and enclosure methods ⋮ On finding the surface admittance of an obstacle via the time domain enclosure method ⋮ On finding an obstacle with the Leontovich boundary condition via the time domain enclosure method
Cites Work
- The enclosure method for inverse obstacle scattering using a single electromagnetic wave in time domain
- The enclosure method for inverse obstacle scattering problems with dynamical data over a finite time interval: II. Obstacles with a dissipative boundary or finite refractive index and back-scattering data
- High frequency asymptotics for the scattering matrix and the inverse problem of acoustical scattering
- The scattering of sound waves by an obstacle
- Elliptic Partial Differential Equations of Second Order
- Enclosing a polygonal cavity in a two-dimensional bounded domain from Cauchy data
- Extracting the geometry of an obstacle and a zeroth-order coefficient of a boundary condition via the enclosure method using a single reflected wave over a finite time interval
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