| Abstract: |
| We study the inverse boundary value problem of detecting a non-uniform conductivity motivated by pacing-guided ablation in cardiac electrophysiology. At the stationary level, the transmembrane potential $u$ in a region \(\Omega\subset\mathbb{R}^3\) of cardiac tissue satisfies
\[
-\nabla\!\cdot(\gamma\nabla u)+\alpha u^3=0 \quad \text{in }\Omega,\qquad
\gamma\nabla u\cdot\nu=g \quad \text{on }\partial\Omega,
\]
where $\gamma$ is an anisotropic conductivity tensor and $\alpha$ a nonlinear ionic response coefficient. The Neumann data $g$ represent pacing currents, and the boundary values $u|_{\partial\Omega}$ correspond to invasive voltage measurements. Ischemic regions are modeled by a subdomain $D\subset\Omega$ where $\gamma$ is piecewise constant.
We address the inverse problem of determining $\gamma$ from the Neumann-to-Dirichlet (NtD) map, assuming that $\alpha$ and $D$ are known. |
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