Abstract
In this study, the time-dependent potential coefficient in a higher-order PDE with initial and boundary conditions is numerically constructed for the first time from a nonlocal integral condition. Even though the inverse identification problem investigated in this study is ill-posed, it has a unique solution. For discretizing the direct problem and finding stable and accurate solutions, we employ the Quintic B-spline (QBS) collocation and Tikhonov regularization methods, respectively. The following nonlinear minimization problem is solved using MATLAB. The collected findings demonstrate that accurate and stable solutions can be found.
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1 Introduction
With the current advancement and reliance on science and engineering, inverse problems (IPs) are becoming a core component in these fields. Some of the applications include the use of heat equation which has been widely applied in scientific processes such as melting, freezing, and manufacturing, in microwave heating applications, medicine, biology, seismology, movement of liquid in a porous media, desalination of seawater, and many more. Many of the applications are modeled using partial differential equations (PDEs). If the input values or conditions are known, solutions can be obtained to determine the behavior of the system [5]. Some of the necessary inputs that are required include initial and boundary conditions, solution domain’s geometry, coefficients, and forcing terms. If some of this information is missing or unknown, in general it will not be possible to determine the behavior of the physical system. However, certain outputs can be experimentally measured and this information, in addition to the input data, can be used to restore the missing input data. This is what is called an inverse problem. IPs are in general ill-posed. In most cases, this means that a small change in the input data can bring about a substantial change in the output solution.
The scope of IPs has been present in several branches of mathematics, engineering, and physics for a long period. Over the past decade, the theory of inverse problems has been considerably developed given partly its significance in applications. However, numerical solutions to these problems require considerable computations. For example, deconvolution in parameter identification, image reconstruction, and seismic exploration all require high performance computers to do the computation in a timely fashion, or to solve the problem more precisely within a specific time interval [36].
Most of the time, the coefficient entries in a PDE model are linked to the physical properties of the system under consideration. In cases where the model is quite simple, these physical properties can be identified through experimentation and the outcomes used to reduce the model to a particular physical system. In cases where the model is sophisticated, it may be difficult or even impossible to measure the physical properties linked to a coefficient in a model equation. In such a case, it may be important to move forward indirectly because of inadequate information, that is, to design and solve the inverse problem for the missing data.
Parameter identification problems tend to involve the use of actual observation or indirect measurement contaminated by noise, to deduce the values of the parameters making up the system under consideration. In most cases, these inverse problems are ill-posed in line with the Hadamard postulate, that is, if the solution does not exist or is not unique, or if it is in violation of the continuous dependence on input data [8]. Over the past few years, many scholars have shown a significant interest in inverse coefficient identification problems. The primary motivation for this study is to determine the unknown potential property of a given region by considering only the data on its boundary. There is also specific attention to such coefficients that describe a physical quantity of a medium.
The existence of additional unknown terms in the inverse problems needs to impose some additional conditions such as nonlocal integral condition as an overdetermination condition. The basic theory and investigation of inverse problems were established in the underlying works of Ivanov [13], Lavrentiev et al. [23], Tikhonov [34], etc. Inverse problems of the higher order PDEs with additional measurements have been studied by few authors. For example, in [10–12], the authors studied IP to recover the timewise potential coefficients in fourth-order pseudo-parabolic equations. In [25, 37], the authors considered an IP to recover an unknown term in fourth- and sixth-order PDEs. Yuldashev [38] established the unique solvability for the solutions for IPs of the fourth-order PDE. Furthermore, Senapati and Jena [33] developed an FEM including the collocation method with septic B-splines for solving the fifth-order boundary value problems. Jena and Gebremedhin [15–17] applied nonic B-spline, decatic B-spline, and octic B-spline collocation techniques, respectively, to approximate the Kuramoto–Sivashinsky equation, Burgers’ equation, and heat and advection–diffusion equations. The authors of [7, 19] proposed ninth and tenth step methods, respectively, to approximate a fourth-order differential equation, while the authors of [6, 14, 18] developed six, seven, and eighth step block methods, respectively, for a fifth-order differential equation. Jena et al. [20] approximated the real definite integrals using the mixed quadrature rule with the quasi-singular integral of electromagnetic field problems. Jena et al. [21, 22] used quartic B-spline approach together with the Butcher’s fifth-order Runge–Kutta scheme to find the approximate solution of the MRLW equation. Mohanty et al. [29] proposed three integral transforms through modified ADM to approximate analytical solutions of different mathematical models arising in physical problems, while Mohanty and Jena [28] presented the differential transformation method to approximate an ODE. Mohanty et al. [30] adopted five-point ILMM by collocation and interpolation on the basic of power series and its derivatives, respectively, for the approximation of fourth-order ODEs.
Recently, Abbasova et al. [1] investigated of solvability and proved the existence and uniqueness of the classical solution for the IP of the linear equation of motion of a homogeneous elastic beam. In this paper, the time-dependent potential coefficient and temperature are determined numerically for the first time for a higher-order PDE from nonlocal integral condition. This is a completely new inverse problem, which has never been investigated before. We use a QBS collocation method to discretize the direct problem whilst the least-squares objective functional is minimized to obtain a quasi-solution to the inverse problem. The potential coefficient is proved [1] to be unique by the contraction mapping principle for the problem. It should be noted that the fundamental contribution of this work is the proposal of a regularization algorithm to solve the identification problem and its numerical realization. Nevertheless, since the inverse problem under investigation is ill-posed, the Tikhonov regularization method is employed in order to obtain stable numerical results.
The layout of the proposed study is considered as follows: The higher-order PDE form nonlocal integral condition is formulated in Sect. 2. In Sect. 3, the QBS collocation technique is given. The convergence and stability of the proposed method are analyzed in Sects. 4 and 5, respectively. Section 6 proposes a numerical minimization approach for the regularized objective function, whereas Sect. 7 offers numerical experiments. The concluding remarks of proposed work are given in Sect. 8.
2 Mathematical formulation of the inverse problem
As a mathematical model, we consider a fourth-order motion equation of a homogeneous elastic beam (HEB) in an square plate \(D_{T}=(0,1)\times (0,T)\), over the time interval from the initial time \(t=0\) to a given final time \(t=T>0\). The governing equation is given by the following HEB [1]:
where \(u=u(x,t)\) is the temperature, β is a given positive number, \(q(t)\) is the potential coefficient, and \(g(x,t)\) is transverse force, subject to the initial conditions (ICs)
where \(\zeta (x)\) and \(\eta (x)\) are the given initial temperature and its rate of change, respectively. For the boundary conditions, we assume that these are of Dirichlet and Neumann type (BCs)
The direct problem is concerned with the determination of the temperature u satisfying the initial boundary value problem (1)–(3), when \(q(t)\) and \(g(x,t)\) are known. The inverse problem, on the other hand, is to determine the unknown \(q(t)\) satisfying (1)–(3) and the nonlocal integral observation
where \(f(x)\), \(\kappa (t)\) are given functions. Physically, expression (4) represents a space average measurement of the temperature. This inverse formulation is significant to modeling several practical applications related to unknown potential and temperature. For instance, in the various fields of human activity, such as mineral exploration, medicine, seismology, biology, desalination of seawater, movement of liquid in a porous medium, etc. [1].
Denote
Definition 1
The solution \(\{q(t),u \}\) comprising functions \(q(t)\in C[0,T]\) and \(u\in \tilde{C}^{2,4}(D_{T})\) of the IP (1)–(4) satisfies equation (1) in \(D_{T}\), conditions (2) in \([0,1]\) and conditions (3) in \([0,T]\).
The following theorem is true [1].
Theorem 1
Let \(g(x,t)\in C(D_{T})\), \(\zeta (x), \eta (x)\in C[0,1]\), \(f(x)\in L_{2}(0,1)\), \(\kappa (t)\in C^{2}[0,T]\), and
be fulfilled. Then, finding the required solution of equations (1)–(4) is equivalent to the problem of obtaining \(q(t)\in C[0,T]\) and \(u\in \tilde{C}^{2,4}(D_{T})\) from (1)–(3) and satisfying
Let the data of equations (1)–(3), (5) satisfy:
-
1.
\(\zeta (x)\in C^{4}[0,1]\), \(\zeta ^{(5)}(x)\in L_{2}(0,1)\), \(\zeta (0)= \varphi (1)=\zeta ''(0)=\zeta ''(1)=\zeta ^{(4)}(0)=\zeta ^{(4)}(1)=0\),
-
2.
\(\eta (x)\in C^{4}[0,1]\), \(\eta '''(x)\in L_{2}(0,1)\), \(\eta (0)=\eta (1)= \eta ''(0)=\eta ''(1)=0\),
-
3.
\(g(x,t), g_{x}(x,t), g_{xx}(x,t)\in C(D_{T})\), \(g_{xxx}(x,t)\in L_{2}(D_{T})\), \(g(0,t)=g(1,t)= g_{xx}(0,t)=g_{xx}(1,t)=0\), \(0\leq t\leq T\),
-
4.
\(0<\beta <\frac{\pi ^{2}}{2}\), \(f(x)\in L_{2}(0,1)\), \(\kappa (t)\in C^{2}[0,T]\), \(\kappa (t)\neq 0\), \(0\leq t\leq T\).
Theorem 2
Let the above conditions \((1)\)–\((4)\) of Theorem 1and
be fulfilled. Then, \(\{q(t),u\}\) from \(C[0,T]\times \tilde{C}^{2,4}(D_{T})\) of the IP (1)–(4) contains a unique solution in the ball K.
3 Discretization of the direct problem via quintic spline functions
In mathematical physics, a direct problem is a problem of modeling some physical fields, processes, or phenomena, especially using partial differential equations (PDEs). The aim of solving a direct problem is to obtain the main dependent variable function that describes and governs naturally a physical field or process.
First, the QBS collocation technique is used for solving the proposed problem (1)–(3), when β, \(q(t)\), \(\zeta (x)\), \(\eta (x)\), and \(g(x,t)\) are given. For using the QBS method, we divide \([0,1]\) into equally spaced grid points, \(x_{i+1}-x_{i}\), \(i=0(1)M\) apart. We denote \(u(x_{i},t_{j})=u_{i}^{j}\), \(q(t_{j})=q^{j}\), and \(g(x_{i},t_{j})=g_{i}^{j}\), where \(x_{i}=i\Delta x\), \(t_{j}=j\Delta t\), \(\Delta x=\frac{1}{M}\) and \(\Delta t=\frac{T}{N}\) for \(i=0(1)M\) and \(j=0(1)N\). The \(Qs_{i}(x)\), \(i=-2(1)M+2\) are defined as [4, 26]:
where \(\mu _{i}=x-x_{i}\) and the set of QBS functions \(\{Qs_{-2}, Qs_{-1},\dots ,Qs_{M+2} \}\) form a basis over \([0,1]\). The \(Qs_{i}\), \(Qs'_{i}\), \(Qs''_{i}\), \(Qs'''_{i}\) and \(Qs^{(iv)}_{i}\) are defined in Table 1.
Theorem 3
Let β be a positive number and \(g(x,t)\), \(\zeta (x)\), \(\eta (x)\), \(f(x)\), \(\kappa (t)\), \(q(t)\) given functions. Suppose the QBS method and finite difference scheme are used for space and time discritization, respectively. Then, numerical solution \(u(x,t)\) is given in equations (23), (29), and (32).
Proof
Assume the expression for approximate solution \(u(x,t)\) at \((x,t_{j})\) is defined as
where \(C_{k}^{j}\) are the time-dependent quantities. The variation of the \(u_{M}(x,t)\), over the element, can be defined as
Using (8), function u with its first four derivatives can be defined as:
where
Now the discretization of equation (1) yields
Simplifying (14) yields
which can be written as
where
Now, using u, \(u_{xx}\), and \(u_{xxxx}\) from equations (9)–(13), we get
where
Now, discretizing the boundary conditions (3), we get
For \(i=0\), using equation (18) in (17), we get
Now, for \(i=1\), we get
Next, for \(i=M-1\), we get
Finally, for \(i=M\), we get
At \(t_{j+1}\), \(j=1,\dots ,N-1\), (19), (20), (17), (21), and (22) can be reformulated as
where
Now for \(j=0\), using the initial condition (2) in (17), we have
For \(i=0\), using (18) in (24), we have
Now, for \(i=1\), we have
Next, for \(i=M-1\), we get
Finally, for \(i=M\), we have
At time step \(t_{1}\), (24)–(28) can be reformulated as
where
Now, we determine the initial vector \((C_{-2}^{j},C_{-1}^{j}, C_{0}^{0}, \dots , C_{M+1}^{0}, C_{M+2}^{0})\). For removing \(C_{-2}^{0}\), \(C_{-1}^{0}\), \(C_{M+1}^{0}\), and \(C_{M+2}^{0}\), we use
Using \(u_{x}\) and \(u_{xx}\) from (10), (11) in equations (30) and (31), we get \(C^{0}_{-2}\), \(C^{0}_{-1}\), \(C^{0}_{M+1}\), and \(C^{0}_{M+2}\), and removing the unknowns \(C_{-2}^{0}\), \(C_{-1}^{0}\), \(C_{M+1}^{0}\), and \(C_{M+2}^{0}\), we have an \((M+1) \times (M+1)\) order system as follows:
□
4 Stability analysis
For the discretized system of (1), the von Neumann stability analysis is performed [2, 27, 31, 35]. For stability, we take \(g(x,t)=0\) and assume local constant \(P=k_{1}\) for a known level, which gives the discretized system of (1) as follows:
where
Now we consider trial solution \(C_{i}^{j}=\delta ^{j} e^{ki \phi}\) at \(x_{i}\), where \(\phi =\theta h\) and \(k=\sqrt{-1}\). Using the trial solution in (33), we get
which can be written as
where
Applying the Routh–Hurwitz criterion under the transformation \(\hat{u}=\frac{1+\rho}{1-\rho}\) in (35), we get
The necessary and sufficient conditions for (33) to be stable \(|\hat{u}|\le 1\) are
Using \(\zeta _{1}\), \(\zeta _{2}\), \(\zeta _{3}\) and simplifying the terms, we get
Since \(\zeta _{1}+\zeta _{2}+\zeta _{3} \ge 0\), \(\zeta _{1}-\zeta _{3} \ge 0\), and \(\zeta _{1}-\zeta _{2}+\zeta _{3} \ge 0\), the discretized system for (1) is unconditionally stable.
Lemma 4.1
The quintic B-spline satisfies
Proof
We know that
at any particular knot \(x_{i}\), so we have
Also in each subinterval \(x_{i-1} \leq x \leq x_{i}\),
Hence
Thus the proof is complete. □
Theorem 4
Suppose that \(f(x) \in C^{5} \in [a,b]\) and \(f^{5}(x) < l^{*}\) with equally spaced partitioning of the domain with uniform step size \((\Delta x)\). If the spline \(U^{*}(x)\) uniquely interpolates \(f(x)\) at the knots then there exists a constant \(\rho _{n}\) such that
Proof
5 Convergence analysis
Suppose \(U(x,t_{j})=\sum_{i=-2}^{M+2} {C_{i}^{j} Qs_{i} (x)}\) is the quintic B-spline approximation to the exact solution \(u(x,t_{j})\). Due to computational error, we assume that \(U^{*}(x,t_{j})=\sum_{i=-2}^{M+2} {C_{i}^{*j} Qs_{i} (x)}\) is the computed spline approximation to \(U(x,t_{j})\) where \(C_{i}^{*j} = (C_{-2}^{*j},C_{-1}^{*j}, C_{0}^{*j}, \dots , C_{M+1}^{*j}, C_{M+2}^{*j})^{T}\). So, we estimate the error \(\Vert u_{i}^{j} - U_{i}^{*j} \Vert _{\infty}\) and \(\Vert U_{i}^{*j} - U_{i}^{j} \Vert _{\infty}\) separately to estimate the error \(\Vert u_{i}^{j} - U_{i}^{j} \Vert _{\infty}\). By putting \(U_{i}^{*j}\) in the simplified form of equation (22), we obtain
From above equation, we have
Also equation (16) can be written as
where
Applying the triangle inequality and Theorem 4, equation (45) gives
Thus we can write
or
where \(\xi = (1+\delta )\rho _{0} l^{*} (\Delta x)^{6}+ \beta B \rho _{2} l^{*} (\Delta x)^{4} + B \rho _{4} l^{*} (\Delta x)^{2}\).
Now from (44) we have
which can be written as
By using (46), we obtain
and, by the properties of matrices, we have
where \(v_{i}\) is the sum of the ith row of the matrix R. Now substituting the above equation into (47), we have
where \(\xi _{1} = \frac{\xi}{|v_{i}|}\) is some finite constant.
Since
by taking the norm of both sides and using equations (49) and (41), we have
Using the triangle inequality, the latter equation yields
where \(\gamma = \rho _{0} l^{*} (\Delta x)^{4} + 186 \xi \). If \(U^{j+1}(x,t)\) is the approximate solution of the exact solution \(u^{j+1}(x,t)\) then
Hence, the theoretical order of convergence of the proposed scheme is \(O(\Delta x^{2}+\Delta t^{2})\).
6 Inverse problem of HEB equation
We now try to identify the stable and accurate solution for terms \(q(t)\) and \(u(x, t)\) satisfying (1)–(4). Keep in mind that, since the inverse problem under investigation is ill-posed and very sensitive to noise (small errors in the additional input data cause large errors in the output potential), the solution needs to be regularized. Therefore, the Tikhonov regularization method is employed in order to obtain a stable and accurate solution. Moreover, the total variation regularization algorithm’s technique may also be applied [32]. The quasi-solution of the inverse problem (1)–(4) is approximated by the minimizer of the Tikhonov regularization functional, which is the gap between the computed and measured data, namely
where u solves (1)–(3) for known \(q(t)\), and \(\lambda \geq 0\) is a parameter of regularization that is introduced to stabilize the approximation solutions. For the discrete form, (51) turns into
The MATLAB subroutine [24] is utilized to minimize the cost function (52).
To measure the errors in this data, \(\kappa (t_{j})\) in (52) is replaced by perturbed (noisy) data \(\kappa ^{\epsilon}(t_{j})\) as follows:
where \(\epsilon _{j}\) are random variables with mean zero and standard deviation
where p represents the noise.
7 Numerical experiments
The solutions for \(q(t)\) and \(u(x,t)\) are constructed in this section for the case of noisy (53) and exact data. We use
for measuring the accuracy. Now, we choose \(T= 1\), for simplicity. The lower bound for \(q(t)\) is taken as −102 while 102 is used for the upper bound.
Example 1
First, when the problem proposed in equations (1)–(4) is taken with a smooth potential
the analytical solution is
the BCs are
the nonlocal integral condition is
where \(f(x)=1\), and the rest of the data are as follows:
It is shown that the criteria of Theorems 1 and 2 are met, indicating that a unique solution is guaranteed. First, when \(q(t)\) is supplied by (56), the accuracy of (1)–(3) is tested using the data (57) and (60). The approximate nonlocal integral measurement in (4) is compared to the analytical solution (59) derived using the QBS collocation technique with \(M=N \in \{10,20,40,80\}\) in Fig. 1. Figure 2 shows the analytical (57) and estimated \(u(x,t)\), as well as absolute errors, for various grid sizes. As the mesh size is reduced, there is a good agreement between the analytical (59) and the estimated \(\kappa (t)\), as seen in Table 2.
In the IP (1)–(4), we take the initial guess for \(\underline{q}\) as
When \(p= 0\) in (53), we use \(M=N = 40\) to begin the analysis for recovering \(q(t)\) and \(u(x,t)\). The term F in (52) is depicted in Fig. 3(a), where a monotonically decreasing convergence is achieved in 20 iterations for a specified tolerance of \(O(10^{-16})\). Figures 3(b) and 3(c) show the exact (56) and approximate \(q(t)\) without and with regularization, respectively. These figures show that, for \(\lambda =0\), we get inexact and unstable solutions for \(q(t)\) with \(rmse(q)=0.3861\), as predicted from to the ill-posedness issue. As a result, regularization is used to stabilize the answer. It is determined from all chosen λ that \(\lambda \in \{10^{-18}, 10^{-17}, 10^{-16}\}\) provides an acceptable and stable accurate estimate for the coefficient \(q(t)\), yielding \(rmse(q)\in \{0.0437,0.0394,0.0560\}\).
Now, as in equation (53), we add \(p \in \{0.01 \%,0.1 \%\}\) to the nonlocal integral \(\kappa (t)\) through (54). In Figs. 4 and 5, the potential \(q(t)\) is shown. As noise p is increased, the approximate results start to build up oscillations with \(rmse(q)\in \{0.8750,24.6756\}\), as seen in Figs. 4(a) and 5(a). Figures 4(b) and 5(b) illustrate the reconstructed potential coefficient for a variety of λ, and one can observe that the most accurate solution is achieved for \(\lambda \in \{10^{-17},10^{-16}\}\), yielding \(rmse(q)\in \{0.0406,0.0825\}\); see Table 3 for additional details. The absolute error norms between the exact (57) and estimated solutions u are shown in Fig. 6, where the influence of \(\lambda >0\) in minimizing the unstable behavior of the reconstructed u can be seen.
Example 2
Now, we consider the problem proposed in equations (1)–(4), with a nonlinear potential coefficient \(q(t)\). Therefore, it is a critical test for the proposed technique of regularization for the governing equation
subject to the ICs
BCs
and nonlocal integral condition
where \(f(x)=1\) and
The exact solution is
Then, with this input data, the conditions of Theorems 1 and 2 are fulfilled and so the solution is unique. The initial guess for \(\underline{q}\) for this example has been chosen as
As in Example 1, we start with \(h=k=0.025\) and pick the situation where \(p=0\) in the data \(\kappa (t)\), as in (54). Figure 7(a) illustrates F from (52), which shows how a monotonically declining convergence is attained in 20 iterations with a specified tolerance of \(O(10^{-8})\). Figures 7(b) and 7(c) show the computed potential \(q(t)\) without and with regularization, respectively, yielding \(rmse(q)\in \{0.1916,0.0731,0.0549,0.0591\}\), as shown in Table 4. Despite the fact that no random noise is simulated using perturbed data (53), numerical noise arises owing to the discrepancy between the QBS collocation solution with a fixed mesh and the actual values of (63)–(68). As a result, regularization is required to reestablish the stability in the \(q(t)\) solution. It is determined that \(\lambda =10^{-10}\) produces a more stable potential coefficient solution.
Now we will test the solution’s stability using noisy data. We use (53) for \(\kappa (t)\) and include \(p \in \{0.01 \%, 0.1 \%\}\) for replicating the input noisy data. In Figs. 8 and 9, the potential \(q(t)\) is shown. Figures 8(a) and 9(a) demonstrate the determined potential \(q(t)\), where the unstable results are obtained if \(\lambda =0\), with \(rmse(q)=1.7669\) and 24.5476. To stabilize \(q(t)\), we use regularization with \(\lambda \in \{10^{-9},10^{-8},10^{-7}\}\) for \(p=0.01 \% \) noise, resulting in \(rmse(q) \in \{0.0693,0.0688,0.1369\}\), and \(\lambda \in \{10^{-8},10^{-7},10^{-6}\}\) for \(p=0.1 \% \) noise, resulting in \(rmse(q) \in \{0.1939,0.1678,0.3608\}\). Figures 8(b) and 9(b) demonstrate the reconstructed potential for various λ, with the best solution achieved for \(\lambda =10^{-8}\) and 10−7, respectively. The influence of \(\lambda >0\) in lowering the unstable behavior of the reconstructed \(u(x,t)\) can be identified in Fig. 10, which shows the precise (67) and approximated \(u(x,t)\) with absolute error norms. We refer to Table 4 for further information on the \(rmse\) values (55) and the minimum value of F (52) at the last iteration. For the stable reconstruction of \(q(t)\), identical results may be derived.
8 Conclusions
The reconstruction problem of the potential \(q(t)\) along with \(u(x,t)\) from the nonlocal integral condition in a higher-order PDE has been solved numerically. The QBS collocation technique has been applied for discretizing the direct problem. The solution has been stabilized using the Tikhonov regularization method. From the obtained results, it has been deduced that stable accurate approximations for \(q(t)\) have been obtained for \(\lambda \in \{10^{-18}, 10^{-17},10^{-16}\}\), when the noise \(p=0\), and for \(\lambda \in \{10^{-17},10^{-16}\}\), when \(p \in \{0.01\%, 0.1\%\}\). For a nonlinear potential coefficient \(q(t)\), it has been observed that stable accurate approximations for \(q(t)\) have been obtained for \(\lambda =10^{-10}\), when the noise \(p=0\), and for \(\lambda \in \{10^{-8},10^{-7}\}\), when \(p \in \{0.01\%, 0.1\%\}\). The stability has been analyzed, demonstrating that the present technique is unconditionally stable for the discretized system of the higher-order equation of motion of a homogeneous elastic beam.
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M.J. Huntul is an Assistant Professor and Muhammad Abbas is an Associate Professor.
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Huntul, M.J., Abbas, M. An inverse problem of fourth-order partial differential equation with nonlocal integral condition. Adv Cont Discr Mod 2022, 55 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13662-022-03727-3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13662-022-03727-3