Stefan Obermayer

1paper

1 Paper

LGMay 29, 2020
Modeling System Dynamics with Physics-Informed Neural Networks Based on Lagrangian Mechanics

Manuel A. Roehrl, Thomas A. Runkler, Veronika Brandtstetter et al.

Identifying accurate dynamic models is required for the simulation and control of various technical systems. In many important real-world applications, however, the two main modeling approaches often fail to meet requirements: first principles methods suffer from high bias, whereas data-driven modeling tends to have high variance. Additionally, purely data-based models often require large amounts of data and are often difficult to interpret. In this paper, we present physics-informed neural ordinary differential equations (PINODE), a hybrid model that combines the two modeling techniques to overcome the aforementioned problems. This new approach directly incorporates the equations of motion originating from the Lagrange Mechanics into a deep neural network structure. Thus, we can integrate prior physics knowledge where it is available and use function approximation--e. g., neural networks--where it is not. The method is tested with a forward model of a real-world physical system with large uncertainties. The resulting model is accurate and data-efficient while ensuring physical plausibility. With this, we demonstrate a method that beneficially merges physical insight with real data. Our findings are of interest for model-based control and system identification of mechanical systems.