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Applied Analysis Seminar: Ionut-Gabriel Farcas, Department of Mathematics, Virginia Tech

Thursday, October 16
1:00 AM - 2:00 PM
203 TMCB

Ionut-Gabriel Farcas, Assistant Professor, Department of Mathematics and Division of Computational Modeling and Data Analytics Academy of Data Science, Virginia Tech

Website: https://math.vt.edu/people/faculty/farcas-ionut-gabriel.html

Fast prediction of plasma instabilities with sparse-grid-accelerated optimized dynamic mode decomposition

Abstract:
Parametric data-driven reduced-order models (ROMs) that embed dependencies in a large number of input parameters are crucial for enabling many-query tasks in large-scale problems. These tasks, including design optimization, control, and uncertainty quantification, are essential for developing digital twins in real-world applications. However, standard training data generation methods are computationally prohibitive due to the curse of dimensionality, as their cost scales exponentially with the number of inputs.

This presentation focuses on efficient training of parametric data-driven ROMs using sparse grid interpolation with (L)-Leja points, specifically targeting scenarios with higher-dimensional input parameter spaces. (L)-Leja points are nested and exhibit slow growth, resulting in sparse grids with low cardinality in low-to-medium dimensional settings, making them ideal for large-scale, computationally expensive problems. Focusing on gyrokinetic simulations of plasma micro-instabilities in fusion experiments as a representative real-world application, we construct parametric ROMs for the full 5D gyrokinetic distribution function via optimized dynamic mode decomposition (optDMD) and sparse grids based on (L)-Leja points. We perform detailed experiments in two scenarios: First, the Cyclone Base Case benchmark assesses optDMD ROM prediction capabilities beyond training time horizons and across variations in the binormal wave number. Second, for a real-world electron temperature gradient driven micro-instability simulation featuring six input parameters, we demonstrate that an accurate parametric optDMD ROM can be constructed at a cost of only 28 high-fidelity gyrokinetic simulations thanks to sparse grids.

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