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Publication Date:
May 2011
ISSN:
1569-3945
DOI:
10.1515/jiip.2011.024

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Editor-in-Chief: Kabanikhin, Sergey I.

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Why a minimizer of the Tikhonov functional is closer to the exact solution than the first guess

1Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, NC 28223, USA.

2Institute for System Analysis of The Russian Academy of Science, Prospect 60 letya Oktyabrya 9, 117312, Moscow, Russia.

3Department of Mathematical Sciences, Chalmers University and Gothenburg University, SE-42196, Gothenburg, Sweden.

Citation Information: Journal of Inverse and Ill-posed Problems. Volume 19, Issue 1, Pages 83–105, ISSN (Online) 1569-3945, ISSN (Print) 0928-0219, DOI: 10.1515/jiip.2011.024, May 2011

Publication History:
Received:
2010-09-28
Published Online:
2011-05-02

Abstract

Suppose that a uniqueness theorem is valid for an ill-posed problem. It is shown then that the distance between the exact solution and terms of a minimizing sequence of the Tikhonov functional is less than the distance between the exact solution and the first guess. Unlike the classical case when the regularization parameter tends to zero, only a single value of this parameter is used. Indeed, the latter is always the case in computations. Next, this result is applied to a specific coefficient inverse problem. A uniqueness theorem for this problem is based on the method of Carleman estimates. In particular, the importance of obtaining an accurate first approximation for the correct solution follows from Theorems 7 and 8. The latter points towards the importance of the development of globally convergent numerical methods as opposed to conventional locally convergent ones. A numerical example is presented.

Keywords.: Uniqueness theorem; Tikhonov functional; a single value of the level of error

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