Etminan, Aslan2016-01-082016-01-082013http://hdl.handle.net/11693/15885Ankara : The Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering and the Graduate School of Engineering and Science of Bilkent University, 2013.Thesis (Master's) -- Bilkent University, 2013.Includes bibliographical references leaves 60-62.The main goal of shape reconstruction is to retrieve the location and shape of an unknown target. This approach is used in a wide range of areas, from detecting cancer tumors to finding buried objects. Various methods can be applied to detect objects in different applications. One of the important challenges in many of these methods is to solve the non-linearity and non-uniqueness of the solutions. Inverse scattering is one of the most efficient ways to retrieve shapes and locations of targets. By illuminating the objects with electromagnetic waves and collecting the scattering fields using appropriate methods, we try to obtain the shape of unknown object. To achieve this goal, we start with an initial guess of the unknown object, then by comparing the scattered far-field patterns of the guess and the real object, we evolve that object and update it iteratively such that we decrease the difference between the patterns and finally achieve the shape of the unknown object. In this thesis, we model the object by one of its parameters, such as the location of the nodes on the surface of the object, or by the conductivity, permittivity, and permeability of the discretized space in which the object is placed. Then, the model parameters are updated iteratively by minimizing the mismatch between the measured data of the target and the collected data from the modeled object. Using surface nodes to model a three-dimensional object is a good choice because we decrease the number of unknowns.xiv, 62 leaves, graphs, tablesEnglishinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessInverse scatteringshape reconstructioniterative solutionnewton minimization approach.WN185 .E85 2013Magnetic resonance imaging--Methods.Electromagnetic imaging of three-dimensional conducting objects using the Newton minimization approachThesis