Mathematical Basis for Physical Inference

Albert Tarantola, Klaus Mosegaard

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

While the axiomatic introduction of a probability distribution over a space is common, its use for making predictions, using physical theories and prior knowledge, suffers from a lack of formalization. We propose to introduce, in the space of all probability distributions, two operations, the OR and the AND operation, that bring to the space the necessary structure for making inferences on possible values of physical parameters. While physical theories are often asumed to be analytical, we argue that consistent inference needs to replace analytical theories by probability distributions over the parameter space, and we propose a systematic way of obtaining such "theoretical correlations", using the OR operation on the results of physical experiments. Predicting the outcome of an experiment or solving "inverse problems" are then examples of the use of the AND operation. This leads to a simple and complete mathematical basis for general physical inference.
Original languageEnglish
JournalarXiv
Publication statusPublished - 20 Sep 2000

Bibliographical note

24 pages, 4 figures

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