Abstract

A general framework for regularization and approximation methods for ill-posed problems is developed. Three levels in the resolution processes are distinguished and emphasized: philosophy of resolution, regularization-approximation schema, and regularization algorithms. Dilemmas and methodologies of resolution of ill-posed problems and their numerical implementations are examined in this framework with particular reference to the problem of finding numerically minimum weighted-norm least-squares solutions of first kind integral equations (and more generally of linear operator equations with nonclosed range). A common problem in all these methods is delineated: each method reduces the problem of resolution to a nonstandard minimization problem involving an unknown critical parameter whose optimal value is crucial to the numerical realization and amenability of the method. The nonstandardness results from the fact that one does not have explicitly, or a priori, the function to be minimized; it has to built up using additional information, convergence rate estimates, and robustness conditions, etc. Several results are developed that complement recent advances in numerical analysis and regularization of inverse and ill-posed (identification and pattern synthesis) problems. An emphasis is placed on the role of constraints, function space methods, the role of generalized inverses, and reproducing kernels in the regularization and stable computational resolution of these problems. The results will be applied specifically to problems of antenna synthesis and identification. However the thrust of the paper is devoted to the interdisciplinary character of operator-theoretic and numerical methods for ill-posed problems.

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