This paper investigates the identification of two coefficients in a coupled hyperbolic system with an observation on one component of the solution. Based on the the Carleman estimate for coupled wave equations a logarithmic type stability result is obtained by measurement data only in a suitably chosen subdomain under the assumption that the coefficients are given in a neighborhood of some subboundary.
In this paper, we study an inverse coefficients problem for two coupled Schr{o}dinger equations with an observation of one component of the solution. The observation is done in a nonempty open subset of the domain where the equations hold. A logarithmic type stability result is obtained. The main method is based on the Carleman estimate for coupled Schr{o}dinger equations and coupled heatn equations, and the Fourier-Bros-Iagolnitzer transform.
This paper concerns inverse problems for strongly coupled Schrodinger equations. The purpose of this inverse problem is to retrieve a stationary potential in the strongly coupled Schrodinger equations from either boundary or internal measurements. Two stability results are derived from a new Carleman estimate for the strongly coupled Schrodinger equations.
We consider an evolution equation with the Caputo-Dzhrbashyan fractional derivative of order $alpha in (1,2)$ with respect to the time variable, and the second order uniformly elliptic operator with variable coefficients acting in spatial variables. This equation describes the propagation of stress pulses in a viscoelastic medium. Its properties are intermediate between those of parabolic and hyperbolic equations. In this paper, we construct and investigate a fundamental solution of the Cauchy problem, prove existence and uniqueness theorems for such equations.
We prove logarithmic stability in the parabolic inverse problem of determining the space-varying factor in the source, by a single partial boundary measurement of the solution to the heat equation in an infinite closed waveguide, with homogeneous initial and Dirichlet data.
This paper is concerned with the inverse problem on determining an orbit of the moving source in a fractional diffusion(-wave) equations in a connected bounded domain of $mathbb R^d$ or in the whole space $mathbb R^d$. Based on a newly established fractional Duhamels principle, we derive a Lipschitz stability estimate in the case of a localized moving source by the observation data at $d$ interior points. The uniqueness for the general non-localized moving source is verified with additional data of more interior observations.