Numerical Methods for the Design of Large-Scale Nonlinear Discrete Ill-Posed Inverse Problems

Design of experiments for discrete ill-posed problems is a relatively new area of research. While there has been some limited work concerning the linear case, little has been done to study design criteria and numerical methods for ill-posed nonlinear problems. We present an algorithmic framework for nonlinear experimental with an efficient numerical implementation. The data are modeled as indirect noisy observations of the model collected via a set of plausible experiments. An inversion estimate based on these data is obtained by weighted Tikhonov regularization whose weights control the contribution of the different experiments to the data misfit term. These weights are selected by minimization of an empirical estimate of the Bayes risk that is penalized to promote sparsity. This formulation entails a bilevel optimization problem that is solved using a simple descent method. We demonstrate the viability of our design with a problem in electromagnetic imaging based on direct current resistivity and magnetotelluric data.

By: E. Haber; L. Horesh; L. Tenorio

Published in: RC24978 in 2010

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