1. Introduction
Identifying point sources or point dipoles inside an object using field measurements on its boundary is a classic example of an
inverse-source problem [
1]. In this work, we consider two-dimensional (2-D) inverse line-source problems in which we seek to determine the locations and currents of one or two electric-current filaments located inside a homogeneous and isotropic magneto-dielectric cylindrical medium. Electromagnetic inverse problems of this type may find applications in biomedical diagnostics related to the operation principles of microwave tomographic systems [
2,
3], and in microwave detection and positioning of dielectric scatterers and pipes inside an enclosure [
4] as well as in the detection of cavities in tree trunks [
5,
6]. We use as measurements the values of the electric field on the boundary of the medium. Then, we calculate the moments obtained by integrating the product of the total field on the cylindrical boundary with complex exponential functions; these are suitable normalized Fourier coefficients of the boundary data. The unknown parameters of the problem can be determined explicitly by means of these moments. In the case of a single internal source, the location coordinates and the current of the source as well as (under certain conditions) the permittivity and permeability of the medium are determined explicitly. For two internal sources, the medium’s characteristics are considered as known and we determine the location coordinates and currents of both sources.
Moreover, we present numerical results for both problems referring to one or two line sources. First, for a single source, we analyze the effect of noisy boundary data on the determination of the unknown parameters. It is seen that the only parameter that is affected by the noise in the measurements is the current of the source. Then, it is shown that the relative error in the determination of the current increases with the noise level (as expected); however, it remains in acceptable levels and well below its upper bound. Next, for two sources, we solve numerically the nonlinear system involving the associated unknown parameters by using a nonlinear least-squares method. The parameters are computed accurately provided that the initial values do not have large deviations from the true ones; a detailed comparative analysis for all parameters is included. Furthermore, in the low-frequency regime, we solve explicitly the pertinent system of equations. Performing a related numerical investigation, we find that for (a is the radius of the cylinder and is the free-space wavenumber), the parameters of the two sources are computed with negligible error.
Numerical schemes for treating 2-D inverse-source problems in electrostatics and magnetostatics were devised in [
7,
8,
9,
10,
11]. Precisely, in [
7], inverse problems were investigated for locating point-wise or small-size conductivity defaults in planar domains from overdetermined boundary measurements of solutions to Laplace’s equation. In [
8], inverse problems were analyzed concerning sources detection from boundary data in a 2-D medium with piece-wise constant conductivity by using the best rational or harmonic approximations in specific domains. Furthermore, in [
9], a reciprocity-gap principle method was developed for locating point sources in planar domains from overdetermined boundary measurements of solutions of Poisson’s equation. In [
10], steady-state electrostatic or thermal imaging boundary-value problems for Laplace’s equation were considered and algorithms were proposed for determining the compact support of inclusions by solving a simpler equivalent point-source problem. In [
11], inverse problems in the 2-D Helmholtz equation from Cauchy data were considered concerning the determination of point-wise sources and sources having compact support within a finite number of small subdomains.
On the other hand, regarding three-dimensional (3-D) inverse-source problems, finding an electrostatic or an acoustic point source inside a homogeneous sphere by using appropriate moments on the spherical boundary was investigated in [
12]. Conventional and reciprocal approaches based on forward-transfer matrices were employed in [
13] to obtain single-dipole solutions on spherical boundary-element model using simplex optimization. In [
14], inverse-source problems for the 3-D time-harmonic Maxwell’s equations were studied by using boundary measurements of the radiated fields and formulating a system of integro-differential equations. In [
15], recovering acoustic monopoles was investigated by means of point-wise acoustic-pressure measurements at a limited number of frequencies and formulation of associated sparse optimization problems for the Helmholtz equation. Besides, determining characteristic sources in the modified and classical Helmholtz equations based on external boundary measurements and a minimization scheme for an equivalent reciprocity functional was analyzed in [
16]. In [
17], three reconstruction algorithms were proposed for the Helmholtz equation, using near-field Cauchy data on the external boundary, to detect the number, location, size, and shape of hidden sources. An algebraic algorithm to identify the number, locations and intensities of the point sources from boundary measurements for the Helmholtz equation in an interior domain was developed in [
18]. An iterative method for numerical reconstruction of the unknown source function in Poisson’s and Helmholtz equations by means of measurements collected at the boundary was presented in [
19]. In [
20], linear integral transforms in Hilbert spaces were introduced and inversion formulas for inverse-source problems in the Helmholtz equation were provided. In the context of brain imaging, inverse problems for point sources or dipoles inside spheres or ellipsoids were presented and discussed in [
21,
22].
This paper is organized as follows. In
Section 2, we formulate the direct scattering problem due to a single internal line source and present its exact solution. In
Section 3, we solve the pertinent inverse line-source problem either when the cylinder has a known refractive index or when the cylinder is electrically small. The case of two internal line sources is analyzed in
Section 4. Several numerical results for a single line source or for two line sources are presented in
Section 5. Particularly, the effect of noisy boundary data on the determination of the unknown parameters of a single line source is analyzed in
Section 5.1. Moreover, in
Section 5.2, we consider the case of two line sources and examine the sensitivity in the determination of the involved parameters with respect to the variations of their respective initial values. The paper closes with conclusions in
Section 6.
2. The Direct Problem and Its Exact Solution
An infinite along the z-axis circular magneto-dielectric cylinder of radius a, with relative dielectric permittivity and magnetic permeability lies in free space with permittivity and permeability . The cylinder is excited by an internal z-directed electric-current filament I, located at , with .
The sole
z-component of the primary electric field
is given by (under
time dependence, with
as the angular frequency and
t as time)
where
denotes the
n-th order cylindrical Hankel functions of the first-kind
, while
and
are the external and internal wavenumbers, respectively, with
being the refractive index of the cylinder, and
.
The total electric field in the interior of the cylinder is expressed as
where
is the generated secondary electric field.
Imposing the boundary conditions referring to the continuity of the tangential components of the electric and magnetic fields on
, we obtain the following exact expressions of the
z-components of the total electric field outside the cylinder and the secondary electric field inside the cylinder [
23]
where
with
denoting the
n-th order cylindrical Bessel functions.
Now, the electric field on the cylinder (i.e., for
) is given by
where
, which is a known quantity for known angular frequency and free-space parameters.
This field is the basic function that we will use to find the line source and the internal parameters of the cylinder.
The above analysis refers to the excitation of the cylinder by a transverse magnetic (TM) polarized field with respect to the
z-axis. In case of excitation by an internal
z-directed magnetic-current filament
, the generated fields have transverse electric (TE) polarization, and the sole
z-component of the magnetic field on
is found to be [
24]
where
In the next sections, for simplicity, we examine only the case of TM polarization. The corresponding results for TE polarization are recovered by replacing and with and , respectively, as well as I with .
3. Inverse Line-Source Problem
We consider an inverse line-source problem in which we seek to determine the coordinates and the current I of the line source. Regarding the cylinder’s material parameters and , we will initially consider them as unknowns and see in which cases they can also be determined explicitly.
We define the normalized moments
where the quantities
used as normalization coefficients are known for known cylinder’s radius
a and free-space parameters.
First, we determine the angle
of the line source (without any assumptions on the parameters of the problem). Consider that
. Then, from (
1) for
, and since
and
, we have that the complex number
has the argument
and the complex number
has the argument
. Hence, both
and
are determined.
3.1. Cylinder with Known Refractive Index
To make analytical progress, one option is to make some assumptions on the material parameters of the cylinder. Suppose that the refractive index is known, but and are unknown. We proceed to determine and . Since , if we find then we can also determine .
From the recurrence relations of the cylindrical Bessel functions (Equation (9.1.27) of [
25]), we have
where
Next, equating two of (
2), yields
which takes the form
Since
is linear in
(for known
), the last is a quadratic equation for
, for each
. This equation is written as
where
The relative permeability
solves (
4), for each
. Having determined
, the coordinate
h of the source’s location is found using (
2). Then, the relative permittivity
follows from the definition of
. The current
I is finally obtained from the moments
given by (
1).
3.2. Electrically-Small Cylinder
If the refractive index
is unknown, then we can derive explicit expressions for the problem’s parameters pertaining to an electrically-small cylinder, i.e., when we are in the low-frequency regime [
26]. Precisely, for
and
, the coefficients
have the following leading-order low-frequency approximations, as
and
,
Combining the latter with (
1), gives
which determines
h. Subsequently, the current
I of the line source is obtained by
Then, the relative permittivity
is found by
However, we cannot determine the refractive index
, and therefore
, from the leading-order approximations (
5) of
, because
(or alternatively the wavenumber
) does not appear. To this end, we could use a higher-order low-frequency approximation, like, e.g.,
by which we obtain an estimate for
, and hence for
and
.
4. The Case of Two Internal Line Sources
Now, we consider that there are two line sources inside the magneto-dielectric cylinder with unknown electric-current filaments and , and unknown position vectors and , respectively. The cylinder’s material parameters and are supposed to be known.
By linear superposition and the definition (
1) of the moments, we get
where
, given by (
3), is known for known parameters of the cylinder.
We can proceed analytically in the low-frequency regime, i.e., assuming that
and
. Then, by (
5), we obtain, as
and
,
where
If
then we can determine
from
. From (
7), we have
Since , the complex number has the argument .
Now, the other unknown parameters
and
are found by means of the moments
and
as follows:
where
are known quantities.
6. Conclusions
Two-dimensional inverse-source problems were considered corresponding to the excitation of a magnetodielectric cylinder by one or two internal line sources. We devised algorithms for the determination of the location coordinates and the currents of the sources. These algorithms relied on the calculation of the complex Fourier coefficients of the electric field on the cylindrical boundary. All the unknown parameters of the problem were determined by suitable manipulations of these coefficients. For the single-source inverse problem, the effect of noisy boundary data was investigated numerically. For the two-source problem, the nonlinear system for the unknown coefficients was solved either numerically or explicitly (the latter under the low-frequency assumption). The accuracy of the derived results was discussed in detail.
The algorithms presented in this work are mostly analytical in the sense that we try (in the cases where this is possible) to obtain explicit expressions for the problem’s unknown parameters without resulting to a numerical solution or a numerical optimization scheme, e.g., to minimize some function as is a common approach in the existing literature. Furthermore, we point out that the developed algorithms are characterized by their simplicity and they can be considered in most cases as exact provided that the electric field on the cylinder is known exactly. In the case of inexact data, one needs to use some method to perform error analysis. Detailed work in this direction for acoustic problems has been presented in [
27]. The origin of errors is from the measurements of the field on the cylinder and from numerical integration on the cylinder with the latter being potentially reduced by more accurate quadrature rules. The examined two-dimensional inverse problems are finite dimensional [
12], since we aim to determine a set of numbers, such as the locations and currents of the line sources. For problems involving continuous distributions of sources, the methods discussed in this work are not directly applicable. Then, one has to result to other methods of a more numerical nature together with some optimization techniques, e.g., to determine the compact support of a continuous current distribution radiating inside a cylinder.
Interesting future work directions concern the extensions to finding line sources inside a two-layered circular cylinder or a homogeneous cylinder of elliptical cross section. Finally, referring to associated three-dimensional problems, determining the characteristics of two point sources or two point dipoles inside a spherical magneto-dielectric medium by extending the techniques of this work is also worth pursuing.