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We are concerned with the quantitative study of the electric field perturbation due to the presence of an inhomogeneous conductive rod embedded in a homogenous conductivity. We sharply quantify the dependence of the perturbed electric field on the geometry of the conductive rod. In particular, we accurately characterise the localisation of the gradient field (i.e. the electric current) near the boundary of the rod where the curvature is sufficiently large. We develop layer-potential techniques in deriving the quantitative estimates and the major difficulty comes from the anisotropic geometry of the rod.The result complements and sharpens several existing studies in the literature. It also generates an interesting application in EIT (electrical impedance tomography) in determining the conductive rod by a single measurement, which is also known as the Calderons inverse inclusion problem in the literature.
We consider a strictly hyperbolic, genuinely nonlinear system of conservation laws in one space dimension. A sharp decay estimate is proved for the positive waves in an entropy weak solution. The result is stated in terms of a partial ordering among
We consider the geodesic X-ray transform acting on solenoidal tensor fields on a compact simply connected manifold with strictly convex boundary and non-positive curvature. We establish a stability estimate of the form $L^2mapsto H^{1/2}_{T}$, where
Concentrated electric field and its energy in materials, containing nanofibers, are discussed. It is shown that the electric field in the vicinity of the end of a fiber is proportional to the external applied field and to the fiber length, whilst it
In this paper, based on the local comparison principle in [12], we study the local behavior of the difference of two spacelike graphs in a neighborhood of a second contact point. Then we apply it to the constant mean curvature equation in 3-dimension
We prove that the stationary magnetic potential vector and the electrostatic potential entering the dynamic magnetic Schrodinger equation can be Lipschitz stably retrieved through finitely many local boundary measurements of the solution. The proof i