Solving a non-linear least squares inverse problem
9 views (last 30 days)
Show older comments
I have written the following forward problem. My ultimate goal is to solve the inverse problem for the parameter K. The equation is temperature variation in the half-space due to a time-periodic surface temperature.

I am going to evaluate at a single depth (1.3 m) so z (y) will be a constant. I have real data but am initially just confirming with synthetic data this forward problem produces. My current specific question is in evaluating the least squares solution
-- can do this simply in the solver-based optimization (https://www.mathworks.com/help/optim/ug/fmincon.html) but am having trouble conceptualizing how to apply it to my forward problem as written. My analytical forward problem is:

%%ANALYTICAL MODEL
%PARAMETERS
conductivity=.0033; %W m-1 K-1
heat_capacity=671.8; %J kg-1K-1
density=1300; %kgm-1^3
diffusivity=conductivity/(heat_capacity*density);
synodic_period=2.55024e6; %seconds
simulation_period=3*synodic_period;
synodic_frequency=(2*pi)/synodic_period;
T_av=250; %K
T_amp=150; %K
skin_depth=sqrt(2*diffusivity/synodic_frequency); %m
t_list=linspace(0,66162100,1000); %time frame over (S_P)
%t_list = 0:5:synodic_period;
z_list=linspace(0,1.5,1000); %depth
T_an=nan(length(t_list),length(z_list)); %output vector
T_an(:, 1) = T_av;
%calculate temperature
for t_index=1:length(t_list)
t=t_list(t_index);
for z_index=1:length(z_list)
z=z_list(z_index);
T_an(t_index,z_index)=T_av+T_amp*exp(-z*sqrt(synodic_frequency/(2*diffusivity)))*cos(synodic_frequency*t-z*sqrt(synodic_frequency/(2*diffusivity)));
end
end
Please let me know if I can provide any additional clarrification. Thank you!
0 Comments
Answers (1)
Sulaymon Eshkabilov
on 8 May 2019
Hi,
I would suggest to employ curve fit models: (linear least squares or non-linear least squares method)
OPTs = fitoptions( 'Method', 'NonlinearLeastSquares');
MODEL = fittype( MODEL, 'coeff', {'K'});
1 Comment
See Also
Categories
Find more on Linear Least Squares in Help Center and File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!