Elizabeth Carlson (PIMS)
Title:Â Deep Connections Between Data-Driven Methods and the Behavior & Stability of Turbulent Flows.
´¡²ú²õ³Ù°ù²¹³¦³Ù:ÌýOne of the challenges of the accurate simulation of turbulent flows is that initial data is often incomplete, which is a significant difficulty when modeling chaotic systems whose solutions are very sensitive to the choice of initial conditions. If one instead has snapshots of a system, i.e. data, one can make a more educated guess at the true state by incorporating the data via data assimilation. Many of the most popular data assimilation methods were developed for general physical systems, not just turbulent flows or chaotic systems. However, in the context of fluids, data assimilation works better than would be anticipated for a general physical system. In particular, turbulent fluid flows have been proven to have the property that, given enough perfect observations, one can recover the full state irrespective of the choice of initial condition. This property is surprisingly unique to turbulent fluid flows, a consequence of their finite dimensionality. In this presentation, we will discuss the continuous data assimilation algorithm that was used to prove the convergence in the original, perfect data setting, present various robustness results of the continuous data assimilation algorithm, and discuss how continuous data assimilation can be used to identify and correct model error. Moreover, we will highlight the efforts of our other current research into long-standing problems in the stability of fluid flows (a very interesting problem that has proven, as expected, very challenging), and how we have discovered some very interesting connections to our data assimilation research.
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