Right answer for the wrong reasons: a cautionary tale from mix experimental modeling
POSTER
Abstract
Mix of high-Z material into the fuel is a significant degradation mechanism for fusion experiments, yet is often observed via indirect means. For inertial fusion, the ‘separated reactant’ technique is a popular experimental platform. We fit a radiation-hydrodynamics model including a turbulent mix model to previous data, obtaining an excellent match to observables, to predict a new experimental series. Unfortunately this model missed every experimental point by at least a factor of three due to missing physics in the model, clearly indicating that the training data was insufficient and the pre-shot model got the right answer for the wrong reasons. Adding a second mechanism (diffusion) to the model plus additional data gives a statistically significant discrimination between the two mechanisms [A.B. Zylstra et al., Phys. Rev. E 97, 061201(R) (2018)]. This is a cautionary tale about the underlying bias often present in models from our preconceptions, which will be a challenge for applying ML methods to physical science.
*This work was performed under the auspices of the U.S. DoE by LANL under contract DE-AC52-06NA52396.
Presenters
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Alex B. Zylstra
- Los Alamos National Laboratory
- Los Alamos Natl Lab