Abstract
Finite element-based high-order solvers of conservation laws offer large accuracy but face challenges near discontinuities due to the Gibbs phenomenon. Artificial viscosity is a popular and effective solution to this problem based on physical insight. In this work, we present a physics-informed machine learning algorithm to automate the discovery of artificial viscosity models. We refer to the proposed approach as an “hybrid” approach which stands at the edge between supervised and unsupervised learning. More precisely, the proposed “hybrid” paradigm is not supervised in the classical sense as it does not utilize labeled data in the traditional way but relies on the intrinsic properties of the reference solution. The algorithm is inspired by reinforcement learning and trains a neural network acting cell-by-cell (the viscosity model) by minimizing a loss defined as the difference with respect to a reference solution thanks to automatic differentiation. This enables a dataset-free training procedure. We prove that the algorithm is effective by integrating it into a state-of-the-art Runge-Kutta discontinuous Galerkin solver. We showcase several numerical tests on scalar and vectorial problems, such as Burgers' and Euler's equations in one and two dimensions. Results demonstrate that the proposed approach trains a model that is able to outperform classical viscosity models. Moreover, we show that the learnt artificial viscosity model is able to generalize across different problems and parameters.
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