Speaker: 

Professor Hailiang Liu

Institution: 

Iowa State University

Time: 

Thursday, May 28, 2009 - 3:00pm

Location: 

RH 340P

Computation of high frequency solutions to wave equations is important
in many applications, and notoriously difficult in resolving wave
oscillations. Gaussian beams are asymptotically valid high frequency solutions
concentrated on a single curve through the physical domain, and superposition
of Gaussian beams provides a powerful tool to generate more general high
frequency solutions to PDEs. In this talk I will present a recovery theory of
high frequency wave fields from phase space based measurements. The
construction use essentially the idea of Gaussian beams, level set description
in phase space as well as the geometric optics. Our main result asserts that
the kth order phase space based Gaussian beam superposition converges to the
original wave field in L2 at the rate of $\epsilon^{k/2-n/4} in dimension $n$.
The damage done by caustics is accurately quantified. Though some calculations
are carried out only for linear Schroedinger equations, our results and
main arguments apply to more general linear wave equations. This work is in
collaboration with James Ralston (UCLA).