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Nonlinear dimensionality reduction for parametric problems: A kernel proper orthogonal decomposition

Reduced‐order models are essential tools to deal with parametric problems in the context of optimization, uncertainty quantification, or control and inverse problems. The set of parametric solutions lies in a low‐dimensional manifold (with dimension equal to the number of independent parameters) emb...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:International journal for numerical methods in engineering 2021-12, Vol.122 (24), p.7306-7327
Main Authors: Díez, Pedro, Muixí, Alba, Zlotnik, Sergio, García‐González, Alberto
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Reduced‐order models are essential tools to deal with parametric problems in the context of optimization, uncertainty quantification, or control and inverse problems. The set of parametric solutions lies in a low‐dimensional manifold (with dimension equal to the number of independent parameters) embedded in a large‐dimensional space (dimension equal to the number of degrees of freedom of the full‐order discrete model). A posteriori model reduction is based on constructing a basis from a family of snapshots (solutions of the full‐order model computed offline), and then use this new basis to solve the subsequent instances online. Proper orthogonal decomposition (POD) reduces the problem into a linear subspace of lower dimension, eliminating redundancies in the family of snapshots. The strategy proposed here is to use a nonlinear dimensionality reduction technique, namely, the kernel principal component analysis (kPCA), in order to find a nonlinear manifold, with an expected much lower dimension, and to solve the problem in this low‐dimensional manifold. Guided by this paradigm, the methodology devised here introduces different novel ideas, namely, 1) characterizing the nonlinear manifold using local tangent spaces, where the reduced‐order problem is linear and based on the neighboring snapshots, 2) the approximation space is enriched with the cross‐products of the snapshots, introducing a quadratic description, 3) the kernel for kPCA is defined ad hoc, based on physical considerations, and 4) the iterations in the reduced‐dimensional space are performed using an algorithm based on a Delaunay tessellation of the cloud of snapshots in the reduced space. The resulting computational strategy is performing outstandingly in the numerical tests, alleviating many of the problems associated with POD and improving the numerical accuracy.
ISSN:0029-5981
1097-0207
DOI:10.1002/nme.6831