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Robust Optimization of PDEs with Random Coefficients Using a Multilevel Monte Carlo Method
Author(s) -
Andreas Van Barel,
Stefan Vandewalle
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
siam/asa journal on uncertainty quantification
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.094
H-Index - 29
ISSN - 2166-2525
DOI - 10.1137/17m1155892
Subject(s) - hessian matrix , monte carlo method , mathematics , conjugate gradient method , mathematical optimization , estimator , nonlinear conjugate gradient method , optimization problem , variance reduction , nonlinear system , computer science , gradient descent , statistics , physics , quantum mechanics , machine learning , artificial neural network
This paper addresses optimization problems constrained by partial differential equations with uncertain coefficients. In particular, the robust control problem and the average control problem are considered for a tracking type cost functional with an additional penalty on the variance of the state. The expressions for the gradient and Hessian corresponding to either problem contain expected value operators. Due to the large number of uncertainties considered in our model, we suggest to evaluate these expectations using a multilevel Monte Carlo (MLMC) method. Under mild assumptions, it is shown that this results in the gradient and Hessian corresponding to the MLMC estimator of the original cost functional. Furthermore, we show that the use of certain correlated samples yields a reduction in the total number of samples required. Two optimization methods are investigated: the nonlinear conjugate gradient method and the Newton method. For both, a specific algorithm is provided that dynamically decides which and how many samples should be taken in each iteration. The cost of the optimization up to some specified tolerance $\tau$ is shown to be proportional to the cost of a gradient evaluation with requested root mean square error $\tau$. The algorithms are tested on a model elliptic diffusion problem with lognormal diffusion coefficient. An additional nonlinear term is also considered.

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