Skip to main content
To KTH's start page To KTH's start page

Martin Norgren

Photo: Jann Lipka

Martin Norgren was installed as professor November 15, 2013 at City Hall. Here you can see his presentation film and read about his research.

Contact Martin Norgren

About Martin Norgren's research

If we take an object, such as a material, a component or a system, and the object is exposed to a known influence, the laws of physics can predict how the object will react. We then solve what is known as a direct problem. Inversely, we can determine certain properties of an object with unknown properties by observing how the object reacts to a known influence. We then solve an inverse problem. Examples of this include ECGs, radar, tomography and ultrasound.
Martin Norgren researches electromagnetic inverse problems. This has involved characterising materials with complex properties, finding sources of current inside the human brain, and determining the properties of snow and earth by using buried cables as probes. Current projects involve identifying deformations in electrotechnical components – such as transformers, for example – by illuminating the components with microwaves, and using measurements of electromagnetic fields in the electricity grid to ascertain the condition of the grid.
These projects provide insight within fields such as diagnosing epilepsy, predicting the amount of water in snow covering and the risk of avalanches, and developing smart electricity grids, which require thorough and continuous monitoring in order to see how the energy is transported and the condition of the grid.

Page responsible:ceremonier@kth.se
Belongs to: About KTH
Last changed: Dec 16, 2013
Lihui Wang
Liubov Belova
Martin Norgren
Magnus Jansson
Jacob Odeberg
Jens Fransson
Joakim Gustafson
Kjell Andersson
Anna-Karin Tornberg
Alexander Balatsky
Hans Bodén
Frank Niklaus
Mehrdad Ghandhari Alavijh
Patric Jensfelt
Lina Bertling Tjernberg
Mats Boijs