Optimizing oblique projections for nonlinear systems using trajectories
ORAL
Abstract
Reduced-order modeling techniques, including balanced truncation and H2-optimal model reduction, exploit the structure of linear dynamical systems to produce models that accurately capture the dynamics. For nonlinear systems operating far away from equilibria, on the other hand, current approaches seek low-dimensional representations of the state that often neglect low-energy features that have high dynamical significance. For instance, low-energy features are known to play an important role in fluid dynamics where they can be a driving mechanism for shear-layer instabilities. Neglecting these features leads to models with poor predictive accuracy despite being able to accurately encode and decode states. In order to improve predictive accuracy, we propose to optimize the reduced-order model to fit a collection of coarsely sampled trajectories from the original system. In particular, we optimize over the product of two Grassmann manifolds defining Petrov-Galerkin projections of the full-order governing equations. We compare our approach with existing methods such as proper orthogonal decomposition and balanced truncation-based Petrov-Galerkin projection, and our approach demonstrates significantly improved accuracy both on a nonlinear toy model and on an incompressible (nonlinear) axisymmetric jet flow with 69,000 states.
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Publication: Otto, Samuel E., Alberto Padovan, and Clarence W. Rowley. "Optimizing Oblique Projections for Nonlinear Systems using Trajectories." arXiv preprint arXiv:2106.01211 (2021).
Presenters
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Samuel E Otto
Princeton University
Authors
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Samuel E Otto
Princeton University
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Alberto Padovan
Princeton University
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Clarence W Rowley
Princeton University, Princeton