10,885 research outputs found

    Efficient and Stable Acoustic Tomography Using Sparse Reconstruction Methods

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    We study an acoustic tomography problem and propose a new inversion technique based on sparsity. Acoustic tomography observes the parameters of the medium that influence the speed of sound propagation. In the human body, the parameters that mostly influence the sound speed are temperature and density, in the ocean - temperature and current, in the atmosphere - temperature and wind. In this study, we focus on estimating temperature in the atmosphere using the information on the average sound speed along the propagation path. The latter is practically obtained from travel time measurements. We propose a reconstruction algorithm that exploits the concept of sparsity. Namely, the temperature is assumed to be a linear combination of some functions (e.g. bases or set of different bases) where many of the coefficients are known to be zero. The goal is to find the non-zero coefficients. To this end, we apply an algorithm based on linear programming that under some constrains finds the solution with minimum l0 norm. This is actually equivalent to the fact that many of the unknown coefficients are zeros. Finally, we perform numerical simulations to assess the effectiveness of our approach. The simulation results confirm the applicability of the method and demonstrate high reconstruction quality and robustness to noise

    A fast and accurate basis pursuit denoising algorithm with application to super-resolving tomographic SAR

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    L1L_1 regularization is used for finding sparse solutions to an underdetermined linear system. As sparse signals are widely expected in remote sensing, this type of regularization scheme and its extensions have been widely employed in many remote sensing problems, such as image fusion, target detection, image super-resolution, and others and have led to promising results. However, solving such sparse reconstruction problems is computationally expensive and has limitations in its practical use. In this paper, we proposed a novel efficient algorithm for solving the complex-valued L1L_1 regularized least squares problem. Taking the high-dimensional tomographic synthetic aperture radar (TomoSAR) as a practical example, we carried out extensive experiments, both with simulation data and real data, to demonstrate that the proposed approach can retain the accuracy of second order methods while dramatically speeding up the processing by one or two orders. Although we have chosen TomoSAR as the example, the proposed method can be generally applied to any spectral estimation problems.Comment: 11 pages, IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensin

    Deep learning versus 1\ell^1-minimization for compressed sensing photoacoustic tomography

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    We investigate compressed sensing (CS) techniques for reducing the number of measurements in photoacoustic tomography (PAT). High resolution imaging from CS data requires particular image reconstruction algorithms. The most established reconstruction techniques for that purpose use sparsity and 1\ell^1-minimization. Recently, deep learning appeared as a new paradigm for CS and other inverse problems. In this paper, we compare a recently invented joint 1\ell^1-minimization algorithm with two deep learning methods, namely a residual network and an approximate nullspace network. We present numerical results showing that all developed techniques perform well for deterministic sparse measurements as well as for random Bernoulli measurements. For the deterministic sampling, deep learning shows more accurate results, whereas for Bernoulli measurements the 1\ell^1-minimization algorithm performs best. Comparing the implemented deep learning approaches, we show that the nullspace network uniformly outperforms the residual network in terms of the mean squared error (MSE).Comment: This work has been presented at the Joint Photoacoustics Session with the 2018 IEEE International Ultrasonics Symposium Kobe, October 22-25, 201

    Reservoir Computing Approach to Robust Computation using Unreliable Nanoscale Networks

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    As we approach the physical limits of CMOS technology, advances in materials science and nanotechnology are making available a variety of unconventional computing substrates that can potentially replace top-down-designed silicon-based computing devices. Inherent stochasticity in the fabrication process and nanometer scale of these substrates inevitably lead to design variations, defects, faults, and noise in the resulting devices. A key challenge is how to harness such devices to perform robust computation. We propose reservoir computing as a solution. In reservoir computing, computation takes place by translating the dynamics of an excited medium, called a reservoir, into a desired output. This approach eliminates the need for external control and redundancy, and the programming is done using a closed-form regression problem on the output, which also allows concurrent programming using a single device. Using a theoretical model, we show that both regular and irregular reservoirs are intrinsically robust to structural noise as they perform computation

    Machine Learning for Fluid Mechanics

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    The field of fluid mechanics is rapidly advancing, driven by unprecedented volumes of data from field measurements, experiments and large-scale simulations at multiple spatiotemporal scales. Machine learning offers a wealth of techniques to extract information from data that could be translated into knowledge about the underlying fluid mechanics. Moreover, machine learning algorithms can augment domain knowledge and automate tasks related to flow control and optimization. This article presents an overview of past history, current developments, and emerging opportunities of machine learning for fluid mechanics. It outlines fundamental machine learning methodologies and discusses their uses for understanding, modeling, optimizing, and controlling fluid flows. The strengths and limitations of these methods are addressed from the perspective of scientific inquiry that considers data as an inherent part of modeling, experimentation, and simulation. Machine learning provides a powerful information processing framework that can enrich, and possibly even transform, current lines of fluid mechanics research and industrial applications.Comment: To appear in the Annual Reviews of Fluid Mechanics, 202
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