Samundra Karki

2papers

2 Papers

FLU-DYNSep 26, 2024
FlowBench: A Large Scale Benchmark for Flow Simulation over Complex Geometries

Ronak Tali, Ali Rabeh, Cheng-Hau Yang et al.

Simulating fluid flow around arbitrary shapes is key to solving various engineering problems. However, simulating flow physics across complex geometries remains numerically challenging and computationally resource-intensive, particularly when using conventional PDE solvers. Machine learning methods offer attractive opportunities to create fast and adaptable PDE solvers. However, benchmark datasets to measure the performance of such methods are scarce, especially for flow physics across complex geometries. We introduce FlowBench, a dataset for neural simulators with over 10K samples, which is currently larger than any publicly available flow physics dataset. FlowBench contains flow simulation data across complex geometries (\textit{parametric vs. non-parametric}), spanning a range of flow conditions (\textit{Reynolds number and Grashoff number}), capturing a diverse array of flow phenomena (\textit{steady vs. transient; forced vs. free convection}), and for both 2D and 3D. FlowBench contains over 10K data samples, with each sample the outcome of a fully resolved, direct numerical simulation using a well-validated simulator framework designed for modeling transport phenomena in complex geometries. For each sample, we include velocity, pressure, and temperature field data at 3 different resolutions and several summary statistics features of engineering relevance (such as coefficients of lift and drag, and Nusselt numbers). %Additionally, we include masks and signed distance fields for each shape. We envision that FlowBench will enable evaluating the interplay between complex geometry, coupled flow phenomena, and data sufficiency on the performance of current, and future, neural PDE solvers. We enumerate several evaluation metrics to help rank order the performance of neural PDE solvers. We benchmark the performance of several baseline methods including FNO, CNO, WNO, and DeepONet.

1.5GRMar 12
GENIE: Gram-Eigenmode INR Editing with Closed-Form Geometry Updates

Samundra Karki, Adarsh Krishnamurthy, Baskar Ganapathysubramanian

Implicit Neural Representations (INRs) provide compact models of geometry, but it is unclear when their learned shapes can be edited without retraining. We show that the Gram operator induced by the INR's penultimate features admits deformation eigenmodes that parameterize a family of realizable edits of the SDF zero level set. A key finding is that these modes are not intrinsic to the geometry alone: they are reliably recoverable only when the Gram operator is estimated from sufficiently rich sampling distributions. We derive a single closed-form update that performs geometric edits to the INR without optimization by leveraging the deformation modes. We characterize theoretically the precise set of deformations that are feasible under this one-shot update, and show that editing is well-posed exactly within the span of these deformation modes.