Abstract
In this paper the inverse problem of finding the time-dependent coefficient of heat capacity together with the solution of a heat equation with periodic boundary and integral overdetermination conditions is considered. The conditions for the existence and uniqueness of a classical solution of the problem under consideration are established. A numerical example using the Crank-Nicolson finite-difference scheme combined with the iteration method is presented.
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1 Introduction
In this paper we consider an inverse problem of simultaneously finding the unknown coefficient and the temperature distribution that satisfy the equation
with the initial condition
the periodic boundary condition
and the overdetermination condition
Denote the domain by
Definition 1 The pair from the class , for which conditions (1)-(4) are satisfied and on the interval , is called a classical solution of the inverse problem (1)-(4).
The parameter identification in a parabolic differential equation from the data of integral overdetermination condition plays an important role in engineering and physics [1–6]. This integral condition in parabolic problems is also called heat moments are analyzed in [4].
Boundary value problems for parabolic equations in which one or two local classical conditions are replaced by heat moments [5–9]. In [9], a physical-mechanical interpretation of the integral conditions was also given. Various statements of inverse problems on determination of this coefficient in a one-dimensional heat equation were studied in [1–3, 5, 6, 10, 11]. In the papers [1, 3, 5], the coefficient is determined from heat moment. Boundary value problems and inverse problems for parabolic equations with periodic boundary conditions are investigated in [10, 12].
In the present work, one heat moment is used with a periodic boundary condition for the determination of a source coefficient.The existence and uniqueness of the classical solution of the problem (1)-(4) is reduced to fixed point principles by applying the Fourier method.
The paper organized as follows. In Section 2, the existence and uniqueness of the solution of the inverse problem (1)-(4) is proved by using the Fourier method. In Section 3, the continuous dependence upon the data of the inverse problem is shown. In Section 4, the numerical procedure for the solution of the inverse problem using the Crank-Nicolson scheme combined with the iteration method is given. Finally, in Section 5, numerical experiments are presented and discussed.
2 Existence and uniqueness of the solution of the inverse problem
We have the following assumptions on the data of the problem (1)-(4).
(A1) , , , ;
(A2) ;
-
(1)
, , , ;
-
(2)
, ;
(A3) ; for arbitrary fixed ;
-
(1)
, , ;
-
(2)
, ;
-
(3)
, ;
where , , .
Theorem 2 Let the assumptions (A1)-(A3) be satisfied. Then the following statements are true:
-
(1)
The inverse problem (1)-(4) has a solution in ;
-
(2)
The solution of the inverse problem (1)-(4) is unique in , where the number () is determined by the data of the problem.
Proof By applying the standard procedure of the Fourier method, we obtain the following representation for the solution of (1)-(3) for arbitrary :
Under the conditions (1) of (A2) and (1) of (A3), the series (5) and its x-partial derivative are uniformly convergent in since their majorizing sums are absolutely convergent. Therefore, their sums and are continuous in . In addition, the t-partial derivative and the xx-second order partial derivative series are uniformly convergent in . Thus, we have . In addition, is continuous in . Differentiating (4) under the assumption (A1), we obtain
and this yields
where
Denote
Using the representation (7), the following estimate is true:
Introduce the set M as follows:
It is easy to see that
Compactness of K is verified by analogy to [6]. By virtue of the Schauder fixed point theorem, we have a solution of equation (7).
Now let us show that there exists () for which the solution of the problem (1)-(4) is unique in . Suppose that is also a solution pair of the problem (1)-(4). Then, from the representations (5) and (7) of the solution, we have
where
Using the estimates
we obtain
Let be an arbitrary fixed number. Fix a number , , such that
where
Then, from equality (10), we obtain
which implies that . By substituting in (9), we have . □
3 Continuous dependence of upon the data
Theorem 3 Under assumptions (A1)-(A3), the solution of the problem (1)-(4) depends continuously upon the data for small T.
The proof of the theorem is verified by analogy to [5].
4 Numerical method
We use the finite difference method with a predictor-corrector type approach that is suggested in [2]. Apply this method to the problem (1)-(4).
We subdivide the intervals and into and subintervals of equal lengths and , respectively. Then we add two lines and to generate the fictitious points needed for dealing with the boundary conditions. We choose the Crank-Nicolson scheme, which is absolutely stable and has a second-order accuracy in both h and τ. [13] The Crank-Nicolson scheme for (1)-(4) is as follows:
where and are the indices for the spatial and time steps respectively, , , , , . At the level, adjustment should be made according to the initial condition and the compatibility requirements.
Equations (11)-(14) form an linear system of equations
where
Now, let us construct the predicting-correcting mechanism. First, integrating equation (1) with respect to x from 0 to 1 and using (3) and (4), we obtain
The finite difference approximation of (16) is
where , , .
For ,
and the values of allow us to start our computation. We denote the values of , at the s th iteration step , , respectively. In numerical computation, since the time step is very small, we can take , , , . At each th iteration step, we first determine from the formula
Then from (11)-(14) we obtain
The system of equations (17)-(19) can be solved by the Gauss elimination method, and is determined. If the difference of values between two iterations reaches the prescribed tolerance, the iteration is stopped, and we accept the corresponding values , () as , (), on the th time step, respectively. By virtue of this iteration, we can move from level j to level .
5 Numerical example and discussions
In this section, we present examples to illustrate the efficiency of the numerical method described in the previous section.
Example Consider the inverse problem (1)-(4) with
It is easy to check that the analytical solution of this problem is
Let us apply the scheme which was explained in the previous section for the step sizes , .
In the case when , the comparisons between the analytical solution (19) and the numerical finite difference solution are shown in Figures 1 and 2.
6 Conclusions
The inverse problem regarding the simultaneous identification of the time-dependent coefficient of heat capacity together with the temperature distribution in a one-dimensional heat equation with periodic boundary and integral overdetermination conditions has been considered. This inverse problem has been investigated from both theoretical and numerical points of view. In the theoretical part of the article, the conditions for the existence, uniqueness and continuous dependence upon the data of the problem have been established. In the numerical part, a numerical example using the Crank-Nicolson finite-difference scheme combined with the iteration method is presented.
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Acknowledgements
Dedicated to Professor Hari M Srivastava.
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Kanca, F. The inverse problem of the heat equation with periodic boundary and integral overdetermination conditions. J Inequal Appl 2013, 108 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1186/1029-242X-2013-108
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/1029-242X-2013-108