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Inverse problem and the pseudoempirical orthogonal function method of solution 1: Theory
29
Citations
15
References
1988
Year
Numerical AnalysisSpectral TheoryParameter EstimationEngineeringOrthogonal PolynomialSignal ReconstructionEmpirical Orthogonal FunctionsEstimation TheoryPublic HealthApproximation TheoryStatisticsMethod Of Fundamental SolutionTemperature Vs HeightDensity EstimationInverse Scattering TransformsInverse ProblemsMultivariate ApproximationFunctional Data AnalysisSolution 1Inverse ProblemStatistical InferenceNonlinear EquationInversion MethodNonlinear Functional Analysis
In situations where a large library of observed distributions of a function, such as temperature vs height, is available, these distributions may be used to form a set of empirical orthogonal functions. When sufficient observed distributions are not available, but when the general mathematical form of the distributions is known, a library may be constructed from the set of mathematical functions. A set of pseudoempirical orthogonal functions may then be constructed from this mathematical library. It is assumed that any distribution of the function may then be constructed from a linear sum of this pseudoempirical orthogonal set. This idea is employed to develop an inversion method using pseudoempirical orthogonal functions when a sufficient library of observations is not available. The technique employs a smoothing constraint as well as a positivity constraint, when warranted by the physical nature of the unknown.
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