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4 - Uniqueness and the Nonnegativity Constraint

from Part I - Theoretical Foundations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 April 2022

Alexander H. Barnett
Affiliation:
Flatiron Institute
Charles L. Epstein
Affiliation:
Flatiron Institute
Leslie Greengard
Affiliation:
Courant Institute
Jeremy Magland
Affiliation:
Flatiron Institute
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Summary

Another constraint often used in the phase retrieval problem to get an essentially unique solution, is the assumption that the unknown is image is real valued, and nonnegative. This assumption alone does not guarantee a unique solution, even up to trivial associates. In this chapter we prove that, if the image is nonnegative, then the phase retrieval problem does generically have a unique solution, up to trivial associates, provided that the autocorrelation image has sufficiently small support. This condition is verifiable from Fourier magnitude data alone. We study the geometry near intersection points of a magnitude torus A and the nonnegative orthant, B+. This naturally leads to a study of the L1-norm on the tangent space of A at the point of intersection, and a criterion for such an intersection to be transversal. The chapter closes with numerical examples examining the failure of transversality.

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Chapter
Information
Geometry of the Phase Retrieval Problem
Graveyard of Algorithms
, pp. 85 - 102
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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