Set inversion
Appearance
Set inversion is the problem of characterizing the reciprocical image X of a set Y by a function f, i.e., X=f-1(Y) = {x ∈ ℝn | f(x) ∈ Y} In most applications, f is a function from ℝn to ℝp and the set Y is a box of ℝp (i.e. a Cartesian product of p intervals of ℝ).
When f is nonlinear the set inversion problem can be solved using interval analysis combined with a branch and bound algorithm. [1]
The main idea consists in building a paving of ℝp made with non-overlapping boxes. For each box [x], we perform the following tests:
- if f([x]) ⊂ Y we conclude that [x] ⊂ X;
- if f([x]) ∩ Y = ∅ we conclude that [x] ∩ X = ∅;
- Otherwise, the box [x] the box is bisected except if its width is smaller than a given precision
Example The set X=f-1([4,9]) where f(x1 ,x2) = x12 + x22 is represented on the figure.

References
- ^ Jaulin, Luc; Kieffer, Michel; Didrit, Olivier; Walter, Eric (2001). Applied Interval Analysis. Berlin: Springer. ISBN 1-85233-219-0.