LGCVSep 25, 2025

Differential-Integral Neural Operator for Long-Term Turbulence Forecasting

arXiv:2509.21196v22 citationsh-index: 10
Originality Highly original
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This addresses a crucial problem for scientific computing applications like climate modeling and aerospace engineering, offering a novel method to improve long-term predictions in turbulence.

The paper tackles the problem of long-term turbulence forecasting, which is challenging for existing neural operators due to error accumulation and loss of physical fidelity, and proposes the Differential-Integral Neural Operator (DINO) that significantly outperforms state-of-the-art models by suppressing errors over hundreds of timesteps and maintaining high fidelity in vorticity fields and energy spectra.

Accurately forecasting the long-term evolution of turbulence represents a grand challenge in scientific computing and is crucial for applications ranging from climate modeling to aerospace engineering. Existing deep learning methods, particularly neural operators, often fail in long-term autoregressive predictions, suffering from catastrophic error accumulation and a loss of physical fidelity. This failure stems from their inability to simultaneously capture the distinct mathematical structures that govern turbulent dynamics: local, dissipative effects and global, non-local interactions. In this paper, we propose the {\textbf{\underline{D}}}ifferential-{\textbf{\underline{I}}}ntegral {\textbf{\underline{N}}}eural {\textbf{\underline{O}}}perator (\method{}), a novel framework designed from a first-principles approach of operator decomposition. \method{} explicitly models the turbulent evolution through parallel branches that learn distinct physical operators: a local differential operator, realized by a constrained convolutional network that provably converges to a derivative, and a global integral operator, captured by a Transformer architecture that learns a data-driven global kernel. This physics-based decomposition endows \method{} with exceptional stability and robustness. Through extensive experiments on the challenging 2D Kolmogorov flow benchmark, we demonstrate that \method{} significantly outperforms state-of-the-art models in long-term forecasting. It successfully suppresses error accumulation over hundreds of timesteps, maintains high fidelity in both the vorticity fields and energy spectra, and establishes a new benchmark for physically consistent, long-range turbulence forecast.

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