NAAICEOct 25, 2022

JAX-DIPS: Neural bootstrapping of finite discretization methods and application to elliptic problems with discontinuities

arXiv:2210.14312v313 citationsh-index: 6Has Code
Originality Incremental advance
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This work addresses the challenge of efficiently solving complex PDEs with irregular interfaces, which is important for computational physics and engineering applications, though it is incremental as it builds on existing PINN-type methods.

The paper tackles the problem of solving elliptic partial differential equations with discontinuities by developing a neural bootstrapping method that leverages existing numerical discretization techniques to train neural network surrogates, resulting in a scalable, mesh-free solver that is competitive in memory and training speed with other frameworks.

We present a scalable strategy for development of mesh-free hybrid neuro-symbolic partial differential equation solvers based on existing mesh-based numerical discretization methods. Particularly, this strategy can be used to efficiently train neural network surrogate models of partial differential equations by (i) leveraging the accuracy and convergence properties of advanced numerical methods, solvers, and preconditioners, as well as (ii) better scalability to higher order PDEs by strictly limiting optimization to first order automatic differentiation. The presented neural bootstrapping method (hereby dubbed NBM) is based on evaluation of the finite discretization residuals of the PDE system obtained on implicit Cartesian cells centered on a set of random collocation points with respect to trainable parameters of the neural network. Importantly, the conservation laws and symmetries present in the bootstrapped finite discretization equations inform the neural network about solution regularities within local neighborhoods of training points. We apply NBM to the important class of elliptic problems with jump conditions across irregular interfaces in three spatial dimensions. We show the method is convergent such that model accuracy improves by increasing number of collocation points in the domain and predonditioning the residuals. We show NBM is competitive in terms of memory and training speed with other PINN-type frameworks. The algorithms presented here are implemented using \texttt{JAX} in a software package named \texttt{JAX-DIPS} (https://github.com/JAX-DIPS/JAX-DIPS), standing for differentiable interfacial PDE solver. We open sourced \texttt{JAX-DIPS} to facilitate research into use of differentiable algorithms for developing hybrid PDE solvers.

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