May 18 – 22, 2026
Virginia Tech
America/New_York timezone

Inverse problems for history-enriched linear model reduction

May 18, 2026, 3:45 PM
25m
Torgersen Hall 1020 (Virginia Tech)

Torgersen Hall 1020

Virginia Tech

Minisymposium Talk Numerical Linear Algebra Tools for Model Order Reduction Numerical Linear Algebra Tools for Model Order Reduction

Speaker

Arjun Vijaywargiya (University of Texas at Austin)

Description

Standard projection-based model reduction for dynamical systems incurs closure error because it only accounts for instantaneous dependence on the resolved state. From the Mori–Zwanzig (MZ) perspective, projecting the full dynamics onto a low-dimensional resolved subspace induces additional noise and memory terms arising from the dynamics of the unresolved component in the orthogonal complement. The memory term makes the resolved dynamics explicitly history dependent. In this work, based on the MZ identity, we derive exact, history-enriched models for the resolved dynamics of linear driven dynamical systems and formulate inverse problems to learn model operators from discrete snapshot data via least-squares regression. We propose a greedy time-marching scheme to solve the inverse problems efficiently and analyze operator identifiability under full and partial observation data availability. For full observation data, we show that, under mild assumptions, the operators are identifiable even when the full-state dynamics are governed by a general time-varying linear operator, whereas with partial observation data the inverse problem has a unique solution only when the full-state operator is time-invariant. To address the resulting non-uniqueness in the time-varying case, we introduce a time-smoothing Tikhonov regularization. Numerical results demonstrate that the operators can be faithfully reconstructed from both full and partial observation data and that the learned history-enriched MZ models yield accurate trajectories of the resolved state.

Author

Arjun Vijaywargiya (University of Texas at Austin)

Co-author

Dr George Biros (University of Texas at Austin)

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