Opzioni
Dynamical Inverse Problems: Theory and Application
Gladwell, G. M. L.
•
Morassi, Antonino
2011
Abstract
Classical vibration theory is concerned with the determination of
the response of a given dynamical system to a prescribed input.
These are called direct problems in vibration and powerful
analytical and numerical methods are available nowadays for their
solution. However, when one studies a phenomenon which is governed
by the equations of classical dynamics, the application of the
model to real life situations often requires the knowledge of
constitutive and/or geometrical parameters which in the direct
formulation are considered as part of the data, whereas, in
practice, they are not completely known or are inaccessible to
direct measurements. Therefore, in several areas in applied
science and technology, one has to deal with inverse problems in
vibration, that is problems in which the roles of the unknowns and
the data is reversed, at least in part. For example, one of the
basic problems in the direct vibration theory - for infinitesimal
undamped free vibrations - is the determination of the natural
frequencies and normal modes of the vibrating body, assuming that
the stiffness and mass coefficients are known. In the context of
inverse theory, on the contrary, one is dealing with the
construction of a model of a given type (i.e., a mass-spring
system, a string, a beam) that has given eigenproperties.
In addition to its applications, the study of inverse problems in
vibration has also inherent mathematical interest, since the
issues encountered have remarkable features in terms of
originality and technical difficulty, when compared with the
classical problems of direct vibration theory. In fact, inverse
problems do not usually satisfy the Hadamard postulates of
well-posedeness, also, in many cases, they are extremely
non-linear, even if the direct problem is linear. In most cases,
in order to overcome such obstacles, it is impossible to invoke
all-purpose, ready made, theoretical procedures. Instead, it is
necessary to single out a suitable approach and trade-off with the
intrinsic ill-posedeness by using original ideas and a deep use of
mathematical methods {}from various areas. Another specific and
fundamental aspect of the study of inverse problems in vibration
concerns the numerical treatment and the development of ad-hoc
strategies for the treatment of ill-conditioned, linear and
non-linear problems. Finally, when inverse techniques are applied
to the study of real problems, additional obstructions arise
because of the complexity of mechanical modelling, the inadequacy
of the analytical models used for the interpretation of the
experiments, measurement errors and incompleteness of the field
data. Therefore, of particular relevance for practical
applications is to assess the robustness of the algorithms to
measurement errors and to the accuracy of the analytical models
used to describe the physical phenomenon.
The purpose of the CISM course entitled ``Dynamical Inverse
Problems: Theory and Application", held in Udine on May 25-29
2009, was to present a state-of-the-art overview of the general
aspects and practical applications of dynamic inverse methods,
through the interaction of several topics, ranging {}from
classical and advanced inverse problems in vibration, isospectral
systems, dynamic methods for structural identification, active
vibration control and damage detection, imaging shear stiffness in
biological tissues, wave propagation, computational and
experimental aspects relevant for engineering problems.
The course was addressed to PhD students and researchers in civil
and mechanic engineering, applied mathematics, academic and
industrial researchers.
In the first chapter Gladwell discusses matrix inverse eigenvalue
problems. He describes the classical inverse problems for in-line
systems, such as discrete models of rods in longitudinal vibration
and beams in flexural vibration. He illustrates the theory
governing the formation of isospectral systems, and describe how
it may be used to construct isospectral finite-element models of
membranes. Throughout the chapter, emphasis is placed on ways of
choosing data that lead to a realistic system. Morassi in the
second chapter describes some classical approaches to the
inversion of continuous second-order systems. Attention is focused
on uniqueness, stability and existence results for Sturm-Liouville
differential operators given in canonical form on a finite
interval. A uniqueness result for a fourth order Euler-Bernoulli
operator of the bending vibration of a beam is also discussed. The
next chapter by R\"{o}hrl presents a method to numerically solve
the Sturm-Liouville inverse problem using a least squares approach
based on eigenvalue data. The potential and the boundary
conditions are estimated {}from two sequences of spectral data in
several examples. Theorems show why this approach works
particularly well. An introduction to the Boundary Control method
(BC-method) for solving inverse problems is presented by Belishev
in the fourth chapter. In particular, the one-dimensional version
of the BC-method is used for two dynamical inverse problems. The
first problem is to recover the potential in a Sturm-Liouville
operator describing the transverse vibration of a semi-infinite
taut string with constant linear mass density by time-history
measurements at the endpoint of the string. The second problem
deals with a second-order vectorial dynamical system governing,
for example, the longitudinal vibration of two semi-infinite
connected beams having constant linear mass densities. An inverse
problem is to recover the matrix coefficients of the lower order
terms via time-domain measurements at the endpoint of the beam.
Connections between the BC-method and asymptotic methods in PDEs,
functional analysis, control and system theory, are especially
investigated in this chapter. In the fifth chapter Vestroni and
Pau introduce dynamic methods for dynamic characterization and
damage identification of civil engineering structures.
Indeterminacy and difficulties in modal identification and model
updating are discussed with reference to several experimental
cases of masonry structures. A damage identification procedure in
a steel arch with concentrate damage is also presented. Eigenvalue
assignment problems in vibration are presented by Mottershead,
Tehrani and Ram in the sixth chapter. Procedures are described for
pole placement by passive modification and active control using
measured receptances. The theoretical basis of the method is
described and experimental implementation is explained. The book
ends with the lectures by Oberai and Barbone on inverse problems
in biomechanical imaging. The authors briefly describe the
clinical relevance of these problems and how the measured data is
acquired. Attention is focused on two distinct strategies for
solving these problems. These include a direct approach that is
fast but relies on the availability of complete interior
displacement measurements. The other is an iterative approach that
is computationally intensive but is able to handle incomplete
interior data and is robust to noise.
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