Combined Data and Deep Learning Model Uncertainties: An Application to the Measurement of Solid Fuel Regression Rate
This work addresses uncertainty quantification for experimental measurements in complex physical processes like rocket fuel regression, though it appears incremental as it applies existing UQ methods to a specific domain.
The paper tackled the challenge of systematically combining data and model uncertainties in measuring solid fuel regression rates, resulting in a forward propagation uncertainty quantification process that produced a probabilistic distribution for the regression rate.
In complex physical process characterization, such as the measurement of the regression rate for solid hybrid rocket fuels, where both the observation data and the model used have uncertainties originating from multiple sources, combining these in a systematic way for quantities of interest(QoI) remains a challenge. In this paper, we present a forward propagation uncertainty quantification (UQ) process to produce a probabilistic distribution for the observed regression rate $\dot{r}$. We characterized two input data uncertainty sources from the experiment (the distortion from the camera $U_c$ and the non-zero angle fuel placement $U_γ$), the prediction and model form uncertainty from the deep neural network ($U_m$), as well as the variability from the manually segmented images used for training it ($U_s$). We conducted seven case studies on combinations of these uncertainty sources with the model form uncertainty. The main contribution of this paper is the investigation and inclusion of the experimental image data uncertainties involved, and how to include them in a workflow when the QoI is the result of multiple sequential processes.