A Feynman-Kac based numerical method for the exit time probability of a class of transport problems

Minglei Yang, Guannan Zhang, Diego del-Castillo-Negrete, Miroslav Stoyanov

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

The exit time probability, which gives the likelihood that an initial condition leaves a prescribed region of the phase space of a dynamical system at, or before, a given time, is arguably one of the most natural and important transport problems. Here we present an accurate and efficient numerical method for computing this probability for systems described by non-autonomous (time-dependent) stochastic differential equations (SDEs) or their equivalent Fokker-Planck partial differential equations. The method is based on the direct approximation of the Feynman-Kac formula that establishes a link between the adjoint Fokker-Planck equation and the forward SDE. The Feynman-Kac formula is approximated using the Gauss-Hermite quadrature rules and piecewise cubic Hermite interpolating polynomials, and a GPU accelerated matrix representation is used to compute the entire time evolution of the exit time probability using a single pass of the algorithm. The method is unconditionally stable, exhibits second order convergence in space, first order convergence in time, and it is straightforward to parallelize. Applications are presented to the advection diffusion of a passive tracer in a fluid flow exhibiting chaotic advection, and to the runaway acceleration of electrons in a plasma in the presence of an electric field, collisions, and radiation damping. Benchmarks against analytical solutions as well as comparisons with explicit and implicit finite difference standard methods for the adjoint Fokker-Planck equation are presented.

Original languageEnglish
Article number110564
JournalJournal of Computational Physics
Volume444
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 1 2021

Funding

This manuscript has been authored by UT-Battelle, LLC , under contract DE-AC05-00OR22725 with the US Department of Energy (DOE). The US government retains and the publisher, by accepting the article for publication, acknowledges that the US government retains a nonexclusive, paid-up, irrevocable, worldwide license to publish or reproduce the published form of this manuscript, or allow others to do so, for US government purposes. DOE will provide public access to these results of federally sponsored research in accordance with the DOE Public Access Plan. This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy , Office of Science , Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research and Office of Fusion Energy Science, Scientific Discovery through Advanced Computing (SciDAC) program, at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, which is operated by UT-Battelle, LLC , for the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract DE-AC05-00OR22725 .

Keywords

  • Adjoint equations
  • Feynman-Kac formula
  • First exit time
  • Fokker-Planck equation
  • Stochastic differential equations
  • Transport

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