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Reduced Order Model Hessian Approximations in Newton Methods for Optimal Control

In: Realization and Model Reduction of Dynamical Systems

Author

Listed:
  • Matthias Heinkenschloss

    (Rice University, Department of Computational and Applied Mathematics)

  • Caleb Magruder

    (MathWorks)

Abstract

This paper introduces reduced order model (ROM) based Hessian approximations for use in inexact Newton methods for the solution of optimization problems implicitly constrained by a large-scale system, typically a discretization of a partial differential equation (PDE). The direct application of an inexact Newton method to this problem requires the solution of many PDEs per optimization iteration. To reduce the computational complexity, a ROM Hessian approximation is proposed. Since only the Hessian is approximated, but the original objective function and its gradient is used, the resulting inexact Newton method maintains the first-order global convergence property, under suitable assumptions. Thus even computationally inexpensive lower fidelity ROMs can be used, which is different from ROM approaches that replace the original optimization problem by a sequence of ROM optimization problem and typically need to accurately approximate function and gradient information of the original problem. In the proposed approach, the quality of the ROM Hessian approximation determines the rate of convergence, but not whether the method converges. The projection based ROM is constructed from state and adjoint snapshots, and is relatively inexpensive to compute. Numerical examples on semilinear parabolic optimal control problems demonstrate that the proposed approach can lead to substantial savings in terms of overall PDE solves required.

Suggested Citation

  • Matthias Heinkenschloss & Caleb Magruder, 2022. "Reduced Order Model Hessian Approximations in Newton Methods for Optimal Control," Springer Books, in: Christopher Beattie & Peter Benner & Mark Embree & Serkan Gugercin & Sanda Lefteriu (ed.), Realization and Model Reduction of Dynamical Systems, pages 335-351, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-3-030-95157-3_18
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-95157-3_18
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