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Section: Partnerships and Cooperations

National Initiatives

ANR AHPI The endeavour of this project is to develop some methodology for modelling and solving certain inverse problems using tools from harmonic and complex analysis. These problems pertain to deconvolution issues, identification of fractal dimension for Gaussian fields, and free boundary problems for propagation and diffusion phenomena. The target applications concern radar detection, clinical investigation of the human body (e.g. to diagnose osteoporosis from X-rays or epileptic foci from electro/magneto encephalography), seismology, and the computation of free boundaries of plasmas subject to magnetic confinement in a tokamak. Such applications share as a common feature that they can be modeled through measurements of some transform (Fourier, Fourier-Wigner, Riesz) of an initial signal. Its non-local character generates various uncertainty principles that make all of these problems ill-posed. The techniques of harmonic analysis, as developed in each case below, form the thread and the mathematical core of the proposal. They are intended, by and large, to regularize the inverse issues under consideration and to set up constructive algorithms on structured models. These should be used to initialize numerical techniques based on optimization, which are more flexible for modelling but computationally heavy and whose convergence often require a good initial guess. In this context, the development of wavelet analysis in electrical engineering, as well as signal and image processing or singularity detection, during the last twenty years, may serve as an example. However, many other aspects of Fourier analysis are at work in various scientific fields. We believe there is a strong need to develop this interaction that will enrich both Fourier analysis itself and its fields of application, all the more than in France the scientific communities may be more separate than in some other countries.

The project was created in july 2007. Meetings were organized twice a year, alternatively in Orléans, Bordeaux, Sophia and Pau Collaborations have began with the Bordeaux team on the use of bandelet formalism for the seismic inversion and a post-doc, hired in october 2008, had in charge to analyze with us the feasibility of this approach. We have worked on the approximation of seismic propagators involving Fourier integral operators by considering different approaches. From November 2010 to November 2011, we have hired an associate engineer who has worked with us on the development of a software for the gravimetric inversion.