Numerical Recovery of the Diffusion Coefficient in Diffusion Equations from Terminal Measurement
Abstract
In this work, we investigate a numerical procedure for recovering a space-dependent diffusion coefficient in a (sub)diffusion model from the given terminal data, and provide a rigorous numerical analysis of the procedure. By exploiting decay behavior of the observation in time, we establish a novel H\"older type stability estimate for a large terminal time T. This is achieved by novel decay estimates of the (fractional) time derivative of the solution. To numerically recover the diffusion coefficient, we employ the standard output least-squares formulation with an H1()-seminorm penalty, and discretize the regularized problem by the Galerkin finite element method with continuous piecewise linear finite elements in space and backward Euler convolution quadrature in time. Further, we provide an error analysis of discrete approximations, and prove a convergence rate that matches the stability estimate. The derived L2() error bound depends explicitly on the noise level, regularization parameter and discretization parameter(s), which gives a useful guideline of the a priori choice of discretization parameters with respect to the noise level in practical implementation. The error analysis is achieved using the conditional stability argument and discrete maximum-norm resolvent estimates. Several numerical experiments are also given to illustrate and complement the theoretical analysis.
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