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Numerical simulations of kinetic problems can become prohibitively expensive due to their large memory footprint and computational costs. A method that has proven to successfully reduce these costs is the dynamical low-rank approximation (DLRA). One key question when using DLRA methods is the construction of robust time integrators that preserve the invariances and associated conservation laws of the original problem. In this work, we demonstrate that the augmented basis update & Galerkin integrator (BUG) preserves solution invariances and the associated conservation laws when using a conservative truncation step and an appropriate time and space discretization. We present numerical comparisons to existing conservative integrators and discuss advantages and disadvantages

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Integration:Integration, the VLSI Journal。 Explanation:集成,VLSI雜志。 Publisher:Elsevier。 SIT:

The so-called independent low-rank matrix analysis (ILRMA) has demonstrated a great potential for dealing with the problem of determined blind source separation (BSS) for audio and speech signals. This method assumes that the spectra from different frequency bands are independent and the spectral coefficients in any frequency band are Gaussian distributed. The Itakura-Saito divergence is then employed to estimate the source model related parameters. In reality, however, the spectral coefficients from different frequency bands may be dependent, which is not considered in the existing ILRMA algorithm. This paper presents an improved version of ILRMA, which considers the dependency between the spectral coefficients from different frequency bands. The Sinkhorn divergence is then exploited to optimize the source model parameters. As a result of using the cross-band information, the BSS performance is improved. But the number of parameters to be estimated also increases significantly, and so is the computational complexity. To reduce the algorithm complexity, we apply the Kronecker product to decompose the modeling matrix into the product of a number of matrices of much smaller dimensionality. An efficient algorithm is then developed to implement the Sinkhorn divergence based BSS algorithm and the complexity is reduced by an order of magnitude.

The coupling effects in multiphysics processes are often neglected in designing multiscale methods. The coupling may be described by a non-positive definite operator, which in turn brings significant challenges in multiscale simulations. In the paper, we develop a regularized coupling multiscale method based on the generalized multiscale finite element method (GMsFEM) to solve coupled thermomechanical problems, and it is referred to as the coupling generalized multiscale finite element method (CGMsFEM). The method consists of defining the coupling multiscale basis functions through local regularized coupling spectral problems in each coarse-grid block, which can be implemented by a novel design of two relaxation parameters. Compared to the standard GMsFEM, the proposed method can not only accurately capture the multiscale coupling correlation effects of multiphysics problems but also greatly improve computational efficiency with fewer multiscale basis functions. In addition, the convergence analysis is also established, and the optimal error estimates are derived, where the upper bound of errors is independent of the magnitude of the relaxation coefficient. Several numerical examples for periodic, random microstructure, and random material coefficients are presented to validate the theoretical analysis. The numerical results show that the CGMsFEM shows better robustness and efficiency than uncoupled GMsFEM.

We develop a Bayesian modeling framework to address a pressing real-life problem faced by the police in tackling insurgent gangs. Unlike criminals associated with common crimes such as robbery, theft or street crime, insurgent gangs are trained in sophisticated arms and strategise against the government to weaken its resolve. They are constantly on the move, operating over large areas causing damage to national properties and terrorizing ordinary citizens. Different from the more commonly addressed problem of modeling crime-events, our context requires that an approach be formulated to model the movement of insurgent gangs, which is more valuable to the police forces in preempting their activities and nabbing them. This paper evolved as a collaborative work with the Indian police to help augment their tactics with a systematic method, by integrating past data on observed gang-locations with the expert knowledge of the police officers. A methodological challenge in modeling the movement of insurgent gangs is that the data on their locations is incomplete, since they are observable only at some irregularly separated time-points. Based on a weighted kernel density formulation for temporal data, we analytically derive the closed form of the likelihood, conditional on incomplete past observed data. Building on the current tactics used by the police, we device an approach for constructing an expert-prior on gang-locations, along with a sequential Bayesian procedure for estimation and prediction. We also propose a new metric for predictive assessment that complements another known metric used in similar problems.

After introducing a bit-plane quantum representation for a multi-image, we present a novel way to encrypt/decrypt multiple images using a quantum computer. Our encryption scheme is based on a two-stage scrambling of the images and of the bit planes on one hand and of the pixel positions on the other hand, each time using quantum baker maps. The resulting quantum multi-image is then diffused with controlled CNOT gates using a sine chaotification of a two-dimensional H\'enon map as well as Chebyshev polynomials. The decryption is processed by operating all the inverse quantum gates in the reverse order.

We present a deterministic algorithm for the efficient evaluation of imaginary time diagrams based on the recently introduced discrete Lehmann representation (DLR) of imaginary time Green's functions. In addition to the efficient discretization of diagrammatic integrals afforded by its approximation properties, the DLR basis is separable in imaginary time, allowing us to decompose diagrams into linear combinations of nested sequences of one-dimensional products and convolutions. Focusing on the strong coupling bold-line expansion of generalized Anderson impurity models, we show that our strategy reduces the computational complexity of evaluating an $M$th-order diagram at inverse temperature $\beta$ and spectral width $\omega_{\max}$ from $\mathcal{O}((\beta \omega_{\max})^{2M-1})$ for a direct quadrature to $\mathcal{O}(M (\log (\beta \omega_{\max}))^{M+1})$, with controllable high-order accuracy. We benchmark our algorithm using third-order expansions for multi-band impurity problems with off-diagonal hybridization and spin-orbit coupling, presenting comparisons with exact diagonalization and quantum Monte Carlo approaches. In particular, we perform a self-consistent dynamical mean-field theory calculation for a three-band Hubbard model with strong spin-orbit coupling representing a minimal model of Ca$_2$RuO$_4$, demonstrating the promise of the method for modeling realistic strongly correlated multi-band materials. For both strong and weak coupling expansions of low and intermediate order, in which diagrams can be enumerated, our method provides an efficient, straightforward, and robust black-box evaluation procedure. In this sense, it fills a gap between diagrammatic approximations of the lowest order, which are simple and inexpensive but inaccurate, and those based on Monte Carlo sampling of high-order diagrams.

Laguerre spectral approximations play an important role in the development of efficient algorithms for problems in unbounded domains. In this paper, we present a comprehensive convergence rate analysis of Laguerre spectral approximations for analytic functions. By exploiting contour integral techniques from complex analysis, we prove that Laguerre projection and interpolation methods of degree $n$ converge at the root-exponential rate $O(\exp(-2\rho\sqrt{n}))$ with $\rho>0$ when the underlying function is analytic inside and on a parabola with focus at the origin and vertex at $z=-\rho^2$. As far as we know, this is the first rigorous proof of root-exponential convergence of Laguerre approximations for analytic functions. Several important applications of our analysis are also discussed, including Laguerre spectral differentiations, Gauss-Laguerre quadrature rules, the scaling factor and the Weeks method for the inversion of Laplace transform, and some sharp convergence rate estimates are derived. Numerical experiments are presented to verify the theoretical results.

Multiscale stochastic dynamical systems have been widely adopted to a variety of scientific and engineering problems due to their capability of depicting complex phenomena in many real world applications. This work is devoted to investigating the effective dynamics for slow-fast stochastic dynamical systems. Given observation data on a short-term period satisfying some unknown slow-fast stochastic systems, we propose a novel algorithm including a neural network called Auto-SDE to learn invariant slow manifold. Our approach captures the evolutionary nature of a series of time-dependent autoencoder neural networks with the loss constructed from a discretized stochastic differential equation. Our algorithm is also validated to be accurate, stable and effective through numerical experiments under various evaluation metrics.

We propose a method for computing the Lyapunov exponents of renewal equations (delay equations of Volterra type) and of coupled systems of renewal and delay differential equations. The method consists in the reformulation of the delay equation as an abstract differential equation, the reduction of the latter to a system of ordinary differential equations via pseudospectral collocation, and the application of the standard discrete QR method. The effectiveness of the method is shown experimentally and a MATLAB implementation is provided.

The paper introduces a new meshfree pseudospectral method based on Gaussian radial basis functions (RBFs) collocation to solve fractional Poisson equations. Hypergeometric functions are used to represent the fractional Laplacian of Gaussian RBFs, enabling an efficient computation of stiffness matrix entries. Unlike existing RBF-based methods, our approach ensures a Toeplitz structure in the stiffness matrix with equally spaced RBF centers, enabling efficient matrix-vector multiplications using fast Fourier transforms. We conduct a comprehensive study on the shape parameter selection, addressing challenges related to ill-conditioning and numerical stability. The main contribution of our work includes rigorous stability analysis and error estimates of the Gaussian RBF collocation method, representing a first attempt at the rigorous analysis of RBF-based methods for fractional PDEs to the best of our knowledge. We conduct numerical experiments to validate our analysis and provide practical insights for implementation.

We present and analyze an algorithm designed for addressing vector-valued regression problems involving possibly infinite-dimensional input and output spaces. The algorithm is a randomized adaptation of reduced rank regression, a technique to optimally learn a low-rank vector-valued function (i.e. an operator) between sampled data via regularized empirical risk minimization with rank constraints. We propose Gaussian sketching techniques both for the primal and dual optimization objectives, yielding Randomized Reduced Rank Regression (R4) estimators that are efficient and accurate. For each of our R4 algorithms we prove that the resulting regularized empirical risk is, in expectation w.r.t. randomness of a sketch, arbitrarily close to the optimal value when hyper-parameteres are properly tuned. Numerical expreriments illustrate the tightness of our bounds and show advantages in two distinct scenarios: (i) solving a vector-valued regression problem using synthetic and large-scale neuroscience datasets, and (ii) regressing the Koopman operator of a nonlinear stochastic dynamical system.

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