DSNov 10, 2023
Hierarchical deep learning-based adaptive time-stepping scheme for multiscale simulationsAsif Hamid, Danish Rafiq, Shahkar Ahmad Nahvi et al.
Multiscale is a hallmark feature of complex nonlinear systems. While the simulation using the classical numerical methods is restricted by the local \textit{Taylor} series constraints, the multiscale techniques are often limited by finding heuristic closures. This study proposes a new method for simulating multiscale problems using deep neural networks. By leveraging the hierarchical learning of neural network time steppers, the method adapts time steps to approximate dynamical system flow maps across timescales. This approach achieves state-of-the-art performance in less computational time compared to fixed-step neural network solvers. The proposed method is demonstrated on several nonlinear dynamical systems, and source codes are provided for implementation. This method has the potential to benefit multiscale analysis of complex systems and encourage further investigation in this area.
DCApr 28, 2024
Enhancing Computational Efficiency in Multiscale Systems Using Deep Learning of Coordinates and Flow MapsAsif Hamid, Danish Rafiq, Shahkar Ahmad Nahvi et al.
Complex systems often show macroscopic coherent behavior due to the interactions of microscopic agents like molecules, cells, or individuals in a population with their environment. However, simulating such systems poses several computational challenges during simulation as the underlying dynamics vary and span wide spatiotemporal scales of interest. To capture the fast-evolving features, finer time steps are required while ensuring that the simulation time is long enough to capture the slow-scale behavior, making the analyses computationally unmanageable. This paper showcases how deep learning techniques can be used to develop a precise time-stepping approach for multiscale systems using the joint discovery of coordinates and flow maps. While the former allows us to represent the multiscale dynamics on a representative basis, the latter enables the iterative time-stepping estimation of the reduced variables. The resulting framework achieves state-of-the-art predictive accuracy while incurring lesser computational costs. We demonstrate this ability of the proposed scheme on the large-scale Fitzhugh Nagumo neuron model and the 1D Kuramoto-Sivashinsky equation in the chaotic regime.