Artykuł w czasopiśmie
Brak miniatury
Licencja

ClosedAccessDostęp zamknięty

Lagrangian Reachtubes: The Next Generation

Autor
Gruenbacher, Sophie
Islam, Md. Ariful
Lechner, Mathias
Grosu, Radu
Smolka, Scott A.
Cyranka, Jacek
Data publikacji
2020
Abstrakt (EN)

We introduce LRT-NG, a set of techniques and an associated toolset that computes a reachtube (an over-approximation of the set of reachable states over a given time horizon) of a nonlinear dynamical system. LRT-NG significantly advances the state-of-the-art Langrangian Reachability and its associated tool LRT. From a theoretical perspective, LRT-NG is superior to LRT in three ways. First, it uses for the first time an analytically computed metric for the propagated ball which is proven to minimize the ball's volume. We emphasize that the metric computation is the centerpiece of all bloating-based techniques. Secondly, it computes the next reachset as the intersection of two balls: one based on the Cartesian metric and the other on the new metric. While the two metrics were previously considered opposing approaches, their joint use considerably tightens the reachtubes. Thirdly, it avoids the "wrapping effect" associated with the validated integration of the center of the reachset, by optimally absorbing the interval approximation in the radius of the next ball. From a tool-development perspective, LRT-NG is superior to LRT in two ways. First, it is a standalone tool that no longer relies on CAPD. This required the implementation of the Lohner method and a Runge-Kutta time-propagation method. Secondly, it has an improved interface, allowing the input model and initial conditions to be provided as external input files. Our experiments on a comprehensive set of benchmarks, including two Neural ODEs, demonstrates LRT-NG's superior performance compared to LRT, CAPD, and Flow*.

Słowa kluczowe EN
Measurement
Tools
Light rail systems
Ellipsoids
Wrapping
Strain
Programming
Dyscyplina PBN
informatyka
Strony od-do
1556 - 1563
Licencja otwartego dostępu
Dostęp zamknięty