Geophysical Data Analysis
Discrete Inverse Theory
- 1st Edition, Volume 45 - August 28, 1989
- Latest edition
- Author: William Menke
- Language: English
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Description
Description
Please use extracts from reviews of first edition
Key features
Key features
@introbul:Key Features@bul:* Updated and thoroughly revised edition* additional material on geophysical/acoustic tomography* Detailed discussion of application of inverse theory to tectonic, gravitational and geomagnetic studies
Readership
Readership
Graduate students and researchers in solid earth geophysics, seismology, atmospheric sciences and other areas of applied physics (e.g. image processing) and mathematics.
Table of contents
Table of contents
Intoduction. Describing Inverse Problems. Some Comments on Probability Theory. Solution of the Linear, Gaussian Inverse Problem, Viewpoint 1. The Length Method. Solution of the Linear, Gaussian Inverse Problem, Viewpoint 2. Generalized Inverses. Solution of the Linear, Gaussian Inverse Problem, Viewpoint 3. Maximum Likelihood Methods. Nonuniqueness and Localized Averages. Applications of Vector Spaces. Linear Inverse Problems and Non-Gaussian Distributions. Nonlinear Inverse Problems. Factor Analysis. Continuous Inverse Theory and Tomography. Sample Inverse Problems. Numerical Algorithms. Applications of Inverse Theory to Geophysics. Appendices. Implementing Constraints with Lagrange Multipliers. Inverse Theory with Complex Quantities. References. Index
Review quotes
Review quotes
"The author has produced a meaningful guide to the subject; one which a student (or professional unfamiliar with the field) can follow without great difficulty and one in which many motivational guideposts are provided....I think that the value of the book is outstanding....It deserves a prominent place on the shelf of every scientist or engineer who has data to interpret."—GEOPHYSICS
"As a meteorologist, I have used least squares, maximum likelihood, maximum entropy, and empirical orthogonal functions during the course of my work, but this book brought together these somewhat disparate techniques into a coherent, unified package....I recommend it to meteorologists involved with data analysis and parameterization."—Roland B. Stull, THE BULLETIN OF THE AMERICAN METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY
"This book provides an excellent introductory account of inverse theory with geophysical applications....My experience in using this book, along with supplementary material in a course for the first year graduate students, has been very positive. I unhesitatingly recommend it to any student or researcher in the geophysical sciences."—PACEOPH
"As a meteorologist, I have used least squares, maximum likelihood, maximum entropy, and empirical orthogonal functions during the course of my work, but this book brought together these somewhat disparate techniques into a coherent, unified package....I recommend it to meteorologists involved with data analysis and parameterization."—Roland B. Stull, THE BULLETIN OF THE AMERICAN METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY
"This book provides an excellent introductory account of inverse theory with geophysical applications....My experience in using this book, along with supplementary material in a course for the first year graduate students, has been very positive. I unhesitatingly recommend it to any student or researcher in the geophysical sciences."—PACEOPH
Product details
Product details
- Edition: 1
- Latest edition
- Volume: 45
- Published: October 4, 1989
- Language: English
About the author
About the author
WM
William Menke
William Menke is a Professor of Earth and Environmental Sciences at Columbia University. His research focuses on the development of data analysis algorithms for time series analysis and imaging in the earth and environmental sciences and the application of these methods to volcanoes, earthquakes, and other natural hazards. He has thirty years of experience teaching data analysis methods to both undergraduates and graduate students. Relevant courses that he has taught include, at the undergraduate level, Environmental Data Analysis and The Earth System, and at the graduate level, Geophysical Inverse Theory, Quantitative Methods of Data Analysis, Geophysical Theory and Practical Seismology.
Affiliations and expertise
Professor of Earth and Environmental Sciences ,Columbia UniversityView book on ScienceDirect
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