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Geomagnetic field modeling using spherical harmonics requires the inversion for hundreds to thousands of parameters. This large-scale problem can always be formulated as an optimization problem, where a global minimum of a certain cost function has to be calculated. A variety of approaches is known in order to solve this inverse problem, e.g. derivative-based methods or least-squares methods and their variants. Each of these methods has its own advantages and disadvantages, which affect for example the applicability to non-differentiable functions or the runtime of the corresponding algorithm.
In this work, we pursue the goal to find an algorithm which is faster than the established methods and which is applicable to non-linear problems. Such non-linear problems occur for example when estimating Euler angles or when the more robust L_1 norm is applied. Therefore, we will investigate the usability of stochastic optimization methods from the CMAES family for modeling the geomagnetic field of Earth's core. On one hand, basics of core field modeling and their parameterization are discussed using some examples from the literature. On the other hand, the theoretical background of the stochastic methods are provided. A specific CMAES algorithm was successfully applied in order to invert data of the Swarm satellite mission and to derive the core field model EvoMag. The EvoMag model agrees well with established models and observatory data from Niemegk. Finally, we present some observed difficulties and discuss the results of our model.
This thesis aims at presenting in an organized fashion the required basics to understand the Glauber dynamics as a way of simulating configurations according to the Gibbs distribution of the Curie-Weiss Potts model. Therefore, essential aspects of discrete-time Markov chains on a finite state space are examined, especially their convergence behavior and related mixing times. Furthermore, special emphasis is placed on a consistent and comprehensive presentation of the Curie-Weiss Potts model and its analysis. Finally, the Glauber dynamics is studied in general and applied afterwards in an exemplary way to the Curie-Weiss model as well as the Curie-Weiss Potts model. The associated considerations are supplemented with two computer simulations aiming to show the cutoff phenomenon and the temperature dependence of the convergence behavior.
The main results of this thesis are formulated in a class of surfaces (varifolds) generalizing closed and connected smooth submanifolds of Euclidean space which allows singularities. Given an indecomposable varifold with dimension at least two in some Euclidean space such that the first variation is locally bounded, the total variation is absolutely continuous with respect to the weight measure, the density of the weight measure is at least one outside a set of weight measure zero and the generalized mean curvature is locally summable to a natural power (dimension of the varifold minus one) with respect to the weight measure. The thesis presents an improved estimate of the set where the lower density is small in terms of the one dimensional Hausdorff measure. Moreover, if the support of the weight measure is compact, then the intrinsic diameter with respect to the support of the weight measure is estimated in terms of the generalized mean curvature. This estimate is in analogy to the diameter control for closed connected manifolds smoothly immersed in some Euclidean space of Peter Topping. Previously, it was not known whether the hypothesis in this thesis implies that two points in the support of the weight measure have finite geodesic distance.