Judit Muñoz-Matute

2papers

2 Papers

NANov 7, 2022
A Deep Double Ritz Method (D$^2$RM) for solving Partial Differential Equations using Neural Networks

Carlos Uriarte, David Pardo, Ignacio Muga et al.

Residual minimization is a widely used technique for solving Partial Differential Equations in variational form. It minimizes the dual norm of the residual, which naturally yields a saddle-point (min-max) problem over the so-called trial and test spaces. In the context of neural networks, we can address this min-max approach by employing one network to seek the trial minimum, while another network seeks the test maximizers. However, the resulting method is numerically unstable as we approach the trial solution. To overcome this, we reformulate the residual minimization as an equivalent minimization of a Ritz functional fed by optimal test functions computed from another Ritz functional minimization. We call the resulting scheme the Deep Double Ritz Method (D$^2$RM), which combines two neural networks for approximating trial functions and optimal test functions along a nested double Ritz minimization strategy. Numerical results on different diffusion and convection problems support the robustness of our method, up to the approximation properties of the networks and the training capacity of the optimizers.

NAJun 20, 2018
Variational Formulations for Explicit Runge-Kutta Methods

Judit Muñoz-Matute, David Pardo, Victor M. Calo et al.

Variational space-time formulations for Partial Differential Equations have been of great interest in the last decades. While it is known that implicit time marching schemes have variational structure, the Galerkin formulation of explicit methods in time remains elusive. In this work, we prove that the explicit Runge-Kutta methods can be expressed as discontinuous Petrov-Galerkin methods both in space and time. We build trial and test spaces for the linear diffusion equation that lead to one, two, and general stage explicit Runge-Kutta methods. This approach enables us to design explicit time-domain (goal-oriented) adaptive algorithms