LGMATH-PHSep 20, 2024

ASPINN: An asymptotic strategy for solving singularly perturbed differential equations

arXiv:2409.13185v13 citationsh-index: 2
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses boundary layer problems in SPDEs for computational physics and engineering, but it is incremental as it builds on existing PINN methods.

The paper tackles solving singularly perturbed differential equations (SPDEs) by proposing ASPINN, a method that uses asymptotic analysis and exponential layers at boundaries, reducing training costs and improving accuracy compared to prior approaches like PINN and GKPINN.

Solving Singularly Perturbed Differential Equations (SPDEs) presents challenges due to the rapid change of their solutions at the boundary layer. In this manuscript, We propose Asymptotic Physics-Informed Neural Networks (ASPINN), a generalization of Physics-Informed Neural Networks (PINN) and General-Kindred Physics-Informed Neural Networks (GKPINN) approaches. This is a decomposition method based on the idea of asymptotic analysis. Compared to PINN, the ASPINN method has a strong fitting ability for solving SPDEs due to the placement of exponential layers at the boundary layer. Unlike GKPINN, ASPINN lessens the number of fully connected layers, thereby reducing the training cost more effectively. Moreover, ASPINN theoretically approximates the solution at the boundary layer more accurately, which accuracy is also improved compared to GKPINN. We demonstrate the effect of ASPINN by solving diverse classes of SPDEs, which clearly shows that the ASPINN method is promising in boundary layer problems. Furthermore, we introduce Chebyshev Kolmogorov-Arnold Networks (Chebyshev-KAN) instead of MLP, achieving better performance in various experiments.

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