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Parker, Robert L.,. Geophysical Inverse Theory / Robert L. Parker. — 1 online resource : 90 figs. — (Princeton Series in Geophysics). — In English. — <URL:http://elib.fa.ru/ebsco/2296568.pdf>.

Record create date: 2/29/2020

Subject: SCIENCE / Earth Sciences / General.; Inversion (Geophysics); Geophysics — Measurement.; Functional analysis.; Mathematical optimization.

Collections: EBSCO

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In many physical sciences, the most natural description of a system is with a function of position or time. In principle, infinitely many numbers are needed to specify that function, but in practice only finitely many measurements can be made. Inverse theory concerns the mathematical techniques that enable researchers to use the available information to build a model of the unknown system or to determine its essential properties. In Geophysical Inverse Theory, Robert Parker provides a systematic development of inverse theory at the graduate and professional level that emphasizes a rigorous yet practical solution of inverse problems, with examples from experimental observations in geomagnetism, seismology, gravity, electromagnetic sounding, and interpolation. Although illustrated with examples from geophysics, this book has broad implications for researchers in applied disciplines from materials science and engineering to astrophysics, oceanography, and meteorology. Parker's approach is to avoid artificial statistical constructs and to emphasize instead the reasonable assumptions researchers must make to reduce the ambiguity that inevitably arises in complex problems. The structure of the book follows a natural division in the subject into linear theory, in which the measured quantities are linear functionals of the unknown models, and nonlinear theory, which covers all other systems but is not nearly so well understood. The book covers model selection as well as techniques for drawing firm conclusions about the earth independent of any particular model.

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Table of Contents

  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • CONTENTS
  • Preface
  • Chapter 1: Mathematical Precursor
    • 1.01 Linear Vector Spaces
    • 1.02 Subspaces, Linear Combinations, and Linear Independence
    • 1.03 Bases and Dimension
    • 1.04 Functionals
    • 1.05 Norms
    • 1.06 Some Norms on Finite-Dimensional Spaces
    • 1.07 Some Norms on Infinite-Dimensional Spaces
    • 1.08 Convergence, Cauchy Sequences, and Completeness
    • 1.09 Completion
    • 1.10 Inner Products
    • 1.11 Hilbert Space
    • 1.12 Two Simple Minimization Problems
    • 1.13 Numerical Aspects of Hilbert Space
    • 1.14 Lagrange Multipliers
    • 1.15 Convexity
  • Chapter 2: Linear Problems with Exact Data
    • 2.01 An Example
    • 2.02 Linear Inverse Problems
    • 2.03 Existence of a Solution
    • 2.04 Uniqueness and Stability
    • 2.05 Some Special Solutions
    • 2.06 The Magnetic Anomaly Profile
    • 2.07 Interpolation
    • 2.08 Seismic Dissipation in the Mantle
  • Chapter 3: Linear Problems with Uncertain Data
    • 3.01 Tolerance and Misfit
    • 3.02 Fitting within the Tolerance
    • 3.03 The Spectral Approach
    • 3.04 The Magnetic Anomaly Problem Revisited
    • 3.05 The Theory in Numerical Dress
    • 3.06 Return to the Seismic Dissipation Problem
    • 3.07 Large Numbers of Observations
  • Chapter 4: Resolution and Inference
    • 4.01 The Central Question
    • 4.02 Resolution
    • 4.03 Bounding Linear Functionals in Hilbert Space
    • 4.04 Bounding Functionals in Practice
    • 4.05 Ideal Bodies
    • 4.06 Linear and Quadratic Programming
    • 4.07 Examples using LP and QP
    • 4.08 A Statistical Theory
  • Chapter 5: Nonlinear Problems
    • 5.01 Some Familiar Questions
    • 5.02 Two Examples
    • 5.03 Functional Differentiation
    • 5.04 Constructing Models
    • 5.05 The Gravity Profile
    • 5.06 The Magnetotelluric Problem I
    • 5.07 Resolution in Nonlinear Problems
    • 5.08 The Magnetotelluric Problem II
    • 5.09 Coda
  • Appendix A: The Dilogarithm Function
  • Appendix B: Table for 1-norm Misfits
  • References
  • Index

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