ACC-PHNov 22, 2025
Efficient Dynamic and Momentum Aperture Optimization for Lattice Design Using Multipoint Bayesian Algorithm ExecutionZ. Zhang, I. Agapov, S. Gasiorowski et al.
We demonstrate that multipoint Bayesian algorithm execution can overcome fundamental computational challenges in storage ring design optimization. Dynamic (DA) and momentum (MA) optimization is a multipoint, multiobjective design task for storage rings, ultimately informing the flux of x-ray sources and luminosity of colliders. Current state-of-art black-box optimization methods require extensive particle-tracking simulations for each trial configuration; the high computational cost restricts the extent of the search to $\sim 10^3$ configurations, and therefore limits the quality of the final design. We remove this bottleneck using multipointBAX, which selects, simulates, and models each trial configuration at the single particle level. We demonstrate our approach on a novel design for a fourth-generation light source, with neural-network powered multipointBAX achieving equivalent Pareto front results using more than two orders of magnitude fewer tracking computations compared to genetic algorithms. The significant reduction in cost positions multipointBAX as a promising alternative to black-box optimization, and we anticipate multipointBAX will be instrumental in the design of future light sources, colliders, and large-scale scientific facilities.
COMP-PHSep 8, 2020
Physics-informed Gaussian Process for Online Optimization of Particle AcceleratorsAdi Hanuka, X. Huang, J. Shtalenkova et al.
High-dimensional optimization is a critical challenge for operating large-scale scientific facilities. We apply a physics-informed Gaussian process (GP) optimizer to tune a complex system by conducting efficient global search. Typical GP models learn from past observations to make predictions, but this reduces their applicability to new systems where archive data is not available. Instead, here we use a fast approximate model from physics simulations to design the GP model. The GP is then employed to make inferences from sequential online observations in order to optimize the system. Simulation and experimental studies were carried out to demonstrate the method for online control of a storage ring. We show that the physics-informed GP outperforms current routinely used online optimizers in terms of convergence speed, and robustness on this task. The ability to inform the machine-learning model with physics may have wide applications in science.
ACC-PHNov 4, 2019
Online tuning and light source control using a physics-informed Gaussian process AdiA. Hanuka, J. Duris, J. Shtalenkova et al.
Operating large-scale scientific facilities often requires fast tuning and robust control in a high dimensional space. In this paper we introduce a new physics-informed optimization algorithm based on Gaussian process regression. Our method takes advantage of the existing domain knowledge in the form of realizations of a physics model of the observed system. We have applied a physics-informed Gaussian Process method experimentally at the SPEAR3 storage ring to demonstrate online accelerator optimization. This method outperforms Gaussian Process trained on data as well as the standard approach routinely used for operation, in terms of convergence speed and optimal point. The proposed method could be applicable to automatic tuning and control of other complex systems, without a prerequisite for any observed data.