Search for dissertations about: "inverse scattering"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 62 swedish dissertations containing the words inverse scattering.
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1. Wave Splitting in Direct and Inverse Scattering Problems
Abstract : The focus of this thesis is on the use of wave splitting in electromagnetic direct and inverse scattering problems. Wave splitting offers a decomposition of wave fields into appropriate input and output wave constituents. READ MORE
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2. Inverse scattering and distribution of resonances on the real line
Abstract : We study aspects of scattering theory for the Schrödinger operator on the real line. In the first part of the thesis we consider potentials supported by a half-line, and we are interested in the inverse problem of reconstruction of the potential from the knowledge of values of the reflection coefficient at equidistributed points on the positive imaginary axis. READ MORE
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3. A Two-stage Numerical Procedure for an Inverse Scattering Problem
Abstract : In this thesis we study a numerical procedure for the solution of the inverse problem of reconstructing location, shape and material properties (in particular refractive indices) of scatterers located in a known background medium. The data consist of time-resolved backscattered radar signals from a single source position. READ MORE
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4. The Back-scattering Problem in Three Dimensions
Abstract : In this thesis we study the (inverse) back-scattering problem for the Schr"odinger operator in $R^3$. We introduce the back-scattering transform $B(v)$ of a real-valued potential $vin C_0^infty(R^3)$, and prove that the back-scattering data associated to $v$ determine $B(v)$. READ MORE
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5. Efficient Adaptive Algorithms for an Electromagnetic Coefficient Inverse Problem
Abstract : This thesis comprises five scientific papers, all of which are focusing on the inverse problem of reconstructing a dielectric permittivity which may vary in space inside a given domain. The data for the reconstruction consist of time-domain observations of the electric field, resulting from a single incident wave, on a part of the boundary of the domain under consideration. READ MORE