Data-driven identification of latent port-Hamiltonian systems
Conventional physics-based modeling techniques involve high effort, e.g., time and expert knowledge, while data-driven methods often lack interpretability, structure, and sometimes reliability. To mitigate this, we present a data-driven system identification framework that derives models in the port...
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Zusammenfassung: | Conventional physics-based modeling techniques involve high effort, e.g.,
time and expert knowledge, while data-driven methods often lack
interpretability, structure, and sometimes reliability. To mitigate this, we
present a data-driven system identification framework that derives models in
the port-Hamiltonian (pH) formulation. This formulation is suitable for
multi-physical systems while guaranteeing the useful system theoretical
properties of passivity and stability. Our framework combines linear and
nonlinear reduction with structured, physics-motivated system identification.
In this process, high-dimensional state data obtained from possibly nonlinear
systems serves as input for an autoencoder, which then performs two tasks: (i)
nonlinearly transforming and (ii) reducing this data onto a low-dimensional
latent space. In this space, a linear pH system, that satisfies the pH
properties per construction, is parameterized by the weights of a neural
network. The mathematical requirements are met by defining the pH matrices
through Cholesky factorizations. The neural networks that define the coordinate
transformation and the pH system are identified in a joint optimization process
to match the dynamics observed in the data while defining a linear pH system in
the latent space. The learned, low-dimensional pH system can describe even
nonlinear systems and is rapidly computable due to its small size. The method
is exemplified by a parametric mass-spring-damper and a nonlinear pendulum
example, as well as the high-dimensional model of a disc brake with linear
thermoelastic behavior. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2408.08185 |