AILGMar 16

Gauge-Equivariant Intrinsic Neural Operators for Geometry-Consistent Learning of Elliptic PDE Maps

arXiv:2603.1473416.9h-index: 1
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This addresses the need for geometry-consistent and discretization-robust surrogate models for elliptic PDEs on form-valued fields in scientific computing.

The paper tackles the problem of learning solution operators for geometric PDEs that transform under gauge changes, where existing methods are brittle to metric perturbations and discretization changes. The proposed GINO method achieves low operator-approximation error, near machine-precision gauge equivariance, robustness to metric perturbations, and strong cross-resolution generalization.

Learning solution operators of partial differential equations (PDEs) from data has emerged as a promising route to fast surrogate models in multi-query scientific workflows. However, for geometric PDEs whose inputs and outputs transform under changes of local frame (gauge), many existing operator-learning architectures remain representation-dependent, brittle under metric perturbations, and sensitive to discretization changes. We propose Gauge-Equivariant Intrinsic Neural Operators (GINO), a class of neural operators that parameterize elliptic solution maps primarily through intrinsic spectral multipliers acting on geometry-dependent spectra, coupled with gauge-equivariant nonlinearities. This design decouples geometry from learnable functional dependence and enforces consistency under frame transformations. We validate GINO on controlled problems on the flat torus ($\mathbb{T}^2$), where ground-truth resolvent operators and regularized Helmholtz--Hodge decompositions admit closed-form Fourier representations, enabling theory-aligned diagnostics. Across experiments E1--E6, GINO achieves low operator-approximation error, near machine-precision gauge equivariance, robustness to structured metric perturbations, strong cross-resolution generalization with small commutation error under restriction/prolongation, and structure-preserving performance on a regularized exact/coexact decomposition task. Ablations further link the smoothness of the learned spectral multiplier to stability under geometric perturbations. These results suggest that enforcing intrinsic structure and gauge equivariance yields operator surrogates that are more geometry-consistent and discretization-robust for elliptic PDEs on form-valued fields.

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