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In limited data computerized tomography, the 2D or 3D problem can be reduced to a family of 1D problems using the differentiated backprojection (DBP) method. Each 1D problem consists of recovering a compactly supported function $f in L^2(mathcal F)$, where $mathcal F$ is a finite interval, from its partial Hilbert transform data. When the Hilbert transform is measured on a finite interval $mathcal G$ that only overlaps but does not cover $mathcal F$ this inversion problem is known to be severely ill-posed [1]. In this paper, we study the reconstruction of $f$ restricted to the overlap region $mathcal F cap mathcal G$. We show that with this restriction and by assuming prior knowledge on the $L^2$ norm or on the variation of $f$, better stability with Holder continuity (typical for mildly ill-posed problems) can be obtained.
Given two intervals $I, J subset mathbb{R}$, we ask whether it is possible to reconstruct a real-valued function $f in L^2(I)$ from knowing its Hilbert transform $Hf$ on $J$. When neither interval is fully contained in the other, this problem has a u
The authors use steepest descent ideas to obtain a priori $L^p$ estimates for solutions of Riemann-Hilbert Problems. Such estimates play a crucial role, in particular, in analyzing the long-time behavior of solutions of the perturbed nonlinear Schrodinger equation on the line.
The Fourier transform truncated on [-c,c] is usually analyzed when acting on L^2(-1/b,1/b) and its right-singular vectors are the prolate spheroidal wave functions. This paper considers the operator acting on the larger space L^2(exp(b|.|)) on which
We study the bilinear Hilbert transform and bilinear maximal functions associated to polynomial curves and obtain uniform $L^r$ estimates for $r>frac{d-1}{d}$ and this index is sharp up to the end point.
Consider the discrete cubic Hilbert transform defined on finitely supported functions $f$ on $mathbb{Z}$ by begin{eqnarray*} H_3f(n) = sum_{m ot = 0} frac{f(n- m^3)}{m}. end{eqnarray*} We prove that there exists $r <2$ and universal constant $