DATA-DRIVEN REDUCED ORDER MODELING OF ENVIRONMENTAL HYDRODYNAMICS USING DEEP AUTOENCODERS AND NEURAL ODES

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Abstract

Model reduction for fluid flow simulation continues to be of great interest across a number of scientific and engineering fields. In a previous work [1], we explored the use of Neural Ordinary Differential Equations (NODE) as a non-intrusive method for propagating the latent-space dynamics in reduced order models. Here, we investigate employing deep autoencoders for discovering the reduced basis representation, the dynamics of which are then approximated by NODE. The ability of deep autoencoders to represent the latent-space is compared to the traditional proper orthogonal decomposition (POD) approach, again in conjunction with NODE for capturing the dynamics. Additionally, we compare their behavior with two classical non-intrusive methods based on POD and radial basis function interpolation as well as dynamic mode decomposition. The test problems we consider include incompressible flow around a cylinder as well as a real-world application of shallow water hydrodynamics in an estuarine system. Our findings indicate that deep autoencoders can leverage nonlinear manifold learning to achieve a highly efficient compression of spatial information and define a latentspace that appears to be more suitable for capturing the temporal dynamics through the NODE framework.

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APA

Dutta, S., Rivera-Casillas, P., Cecil, O. M., Farthing, M. W., Perracchione, E., & Putti, M. (2021). DATA-DRIVEN REDUCED ORDER MODELING OF ENVIRONMENTAL HYDRODYNAMICS USING DEEP AUTOENCODERS AND NEURAL ODES. In 9th International Conference on Computational Methods for Coupled Problems in Science and Engineering, COUPLED PROBLEMS 2021. International Center for Numerical Methods in Engineering. https://doi.org/10.23967/coupled.2021.017

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