Abstract of the paper ``Variational structure of inverse problems
in wave propagation and vibration''
Practical algorithms for solving realistic inverse problems may often
be viewed as problems in nonlinear programming with the data serving
as constraints. Such problems are most easily analyzed when
it is possible to segment the solution space into regions
that are feasible (satisfying all the known constraints) and
infeasible (violating some of the constraints). Then, if the feasible
set is convex or at least compact, the solution
to the problem will normally lie on the boundary of the feasible
set. A nonlinear program may seek the solution by systematically
exploring the boundary while satisfying progressively more constraints.
Examples of inverse problems in wave propagation (traveltime tomography)
and vibration (modal analysis) will be presented to illustrate
how the variational structure of these problems may be used to create
nonlinear programs using implicit variational constraints.
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