Methods for Solving Incorrectly Posed Problems von V.A. Morozov | ISBN 9781461252801

Methods for Solving Incorrectly Posed Problems

von V.A. Morozov, herausgegeben von Z. Nashed, übersetzt von A.B. Aries
Buchcover Methods for Solving Incorrectly Posed Problems | V.A. Morozov | EAN 9781461252801 | ISBN 1-4612-5280-6 | ISBN 978-1-4612-5280-1

Methods for Solving Incorrectly Posed Problems

von V.A. Morozov, herausgegeben von Z. Nashed, übersetzt von A.B. Aries
Some problems of mathematical physics and analysis can be formulated as the problem of solving the equation f € F, (1) Au = f, where A: DA C U + F is an operator with a non-empty domain of definition D , in a metric space U, with range in a metric space F. The metrics A on U and F will be denoted by P and P ' respectively. Relative u F to the twin spaces U and F, J. Hadamard P-06] gave the following defini tion of correctness: the problem (1) is said to be well-posed (correct, properly posed) if the following conditions are satisfied: (1) The range of the value Q of the operator A coincides with A F („sol vabi li ty“ condition); (2) The equality AU = AU for any u , u € DA implies the I 2 l 2 equality u = u („uniqueness“ condition); l 2 (3) The inverse operator A-I is continuous on F („stability“ condition). Any reasonable mathematical formulation of a physical problem requires that conditions (1)-(3) be satisfied. That is why Hadamard postulated that any „ill-posed“ (improperly posed) problem, that is to say, one which does not satisfy conditions (1)-(3), is non-physical. Hadamard also gave the now classical example of an ill-posed problem, namely, the Cauchy problem for the Laplace equation.