Electromagnetic theory offers fascination and challenge from both a physical and a mathematical perspective. This monograph contains the newest results on the use of electromagnetic probes to interrogate dielectric material structures for material properties and geometry. The authors begin with basic electromagnetics, such as Maxwell's equations, and present modeling, theory, and computational results. The book systematically exploits interface phenomena, the electrodynamics of material responses, and time dependent interrogating signals in an integrated manner. Strengths of this volume include a clear discussion of materials properties from the electromagnetic point of view, a careful formulation of the imaging problems addressed, rigorous treatment of mathematical issues, and useful illustration of computational methods and results. While confined to internal vision in one-dimensional settings, this volume will stimulate further developments in internal vision to include two- and three-dimensional interior assessments. An excellent and robust source of applied mathematics and engineering research challenges for the future.
H. T. Banks is University Professor and Drexel Professor of Mathematics and Director of the Center for Research and Scientific Computation at North Carolina State University. He has contributed to inverse problem methodology for many years, and his current interests include inverse problems arising in an electromagnetic setting.
Michael W. Buksas is a Postdoctoral Research Associate at Los Alamos National Laboratory, where he continues to work on problems related to numerical simulation of Maxwell's equations and material interrogation.
Tao Lin is an Associate Professor in the Department of Mathematics at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. His research involves numerical methods for both forward and inverse problems of partial differential equations.