A ill-posed scattering problem saturating Weyl's law
Abstract: This paper focuses on the well-posedness (or lack thereof) of three-dimensional time-harmonic wave propagation problems modeled by the Helmholtz equation. It is well-known that if the problem is set in bounded domain with Dirichlet boundary conditions, then the Helmholtz problem is well-posed for all (real-valued) frequencies except for a sequence of countably many resonant frequencies that accumulate at infinity. In fact, if the domain is sufficiently smooth, this can be quantified further and Weyl's law states that the number of resonant frequencies less than a given $\omega > 0$ scales as $\omega3$. On the other hand, scattering problems set in $\mathbb{R}3$ with a radiation condition at infinity and a bounded obstacle modeled by variations in the PDE coefficients are well-posed for all frequencies under mild regularity assumption on such coefficients. In 2001, Filinov provided a counter example of a rough coefficient such that the scattering problem is not well-posed for (at least) a single frequency $\omega$. In this contribution, we use this result to show that for all $\varepsilon > 0$ we can design a rough coefficient corresponding to a compactly supported obstacle such that the scattering problem is ill-posed for a countable sequence of frequencies accumulating at infinity, and such that the number of such frequencies less than any given $\omega > 0$ scales as $\omega{3-\varepsilon}$.
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