We will use a notation consistent with earlier work of Berryman 1994 on crosswell seismic tomography in which the linear inversion problem to be solved takes the form
Ms = t,
where we assume that the data vector and the linear
forward modeling operator
are given and that the model
vector
is being sought.
In crosswell tomography example, is
an n-vector of wave slownesses associated in either two- or
three-dimensions with cells of constant slowness,
is a
matrix of ray-path lengths such that Mij is the length of the
i-th ray path through the j-th cell, and
is an m-vector of the traveltimes associated
with the ray paths between specified and numbered pairs of sources and
receivers. The assumption that the ray-path matrix M is known
corresponds to assuming that the full inverse problem is being solved
in an iterative fashion -- in which case the ray-path matrix in
question is just the one in use in the latest iteration. We generally
assume in addition that the problem is overdetermined so that m > n,
i.e., the number of data exceed the dimension of the model
space.