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Seminars

Equation-free modeling of complex/multiscale systems

Yannis G. Kevrekidis
Department of Chemical Engineering and PACM
Princeton University

When: Thursday, January 26, 2006
Time: 2:30 PM to 3:30 PM
Where: Duncan Hall 1070

Abstract:

In current modeling , the best available descriptions of a system often come at a fine level (atomistic, stochastic, microscopic, individual-based) while the  questions asked and the tasks required by the modeler (prediction, parametric analysis,  optimization and control) are at a  much coarser, averaged, macroscopic level. Traditional modeling approaches start by first deriving macroscopic evolution equations from the microscopic models, and then bringing our arsenal of mathematical and algorithmic tools to bear on these macroscopic descriptions.

Over the last few years, and with several collaborators, we have developed and validated a mathematically inspired, computational enabling technology that allows the modeler to perform macroscopic tasks acting on the microscopic models directly. We call this the ``equation-free” approach, since it circumvents the step of obtaining accurate macroscopic descriptions.

We will argue that the backbone of this approach is the design of  (computational) experiments.  In traditional numerical analysis, the main code “pings” a subroutine containing the model, and uses the returned information (time derivatives, function evaluations, functional derivatives) to perform computer-assisted analysis. In our approach the same main code “pings” a subroutine that sets up a short ensemble of appropriately initialized computational experiments from which the same quantities are estimated  (rather than evaluated).  Traditional continuum numerical algorithms can thus be viewed as  protocols for experimental design (where “experiment” means a computational experiment set up and  performed with a model at a different level of  description).

Ultimately, what makes it all possible is the ability to initialize computational experiments at will matrix-free numerical analysis and systems theory tools like variance reduction and estimation- bridges microscopic simulation with macroscopic modeling.  Some connections of this approach with modern data analysis techniques will also be discussed.

 

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