Plotting

 Louboutin, Mathias


Learned coupled inversion for carbon sequestration monitoring and forecasting with Fourier neural operators

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Seismic monitoring of carbon storage sequestration is a challenging problem involving both fluid-flow physics and wave physics. Additionally, monitoring usually requires the solvers for these physics to be coupled and differentiable to effectively invert for the subsurface properties of interest. To drastically reduce the computational cost, we introduce a learned coupled inversion framework based on the wave modeling operator, rock property conversion and a proxy fluid-flow simulator. We show that we can accurately use a Fourier neural operator as a proxy for the fluid-flow simulator for a fraction of the computational cost. We demonstrate the efficacy of our proposed method by means of a synthetic experiment. Finally, our framework is extended to carbon sequestration forecasting, where we effectively use the surrogate Fourier neural operator to forecast the CO2 plume in the future at near-zero additional cost.


Preconditioned training of normalizing flows for variational inference in inverse problems

arXiv.org Machine Learning

Obtaining samples from the posterior distribution of inverse problems with expensive forward operators is challenging especially when the unknowns involve the strongly heterogeneous Earth. To meet these challenges, we propose a preconditioning scheme involving a conditional normalizing flow (NF) capable of sampling from a low-fidelity posterior distribution directly. This conditional NF is used to speed up the training of the high-fidelity objective involving minimization of the Kullback-Leibler divergence between the predicted and the desired high-fidelity posterior density for indirect measurements at hand. To minimize costs associated with the forward operator, we initialize the high-fidelity NF with the weights of the pretrained low-fidelity NF, which is trained beforehand on available model and data pairs. Our numerical experiments, including a 2D toy and a seismic compressed sensing example, demonstrate that thanks to the preconditioning considerable speed-ups are achievable compared to training NFs from scratch.


Neural network augmented wave-equation simulation

arXiv.org Machine Learning

Accurate forward modeling is important for solving inverse problems. An inaccurate wave-equation simulation, as a forward operator, will offset the results obtained via inversion. In this work, we consider the case where we deal with incomplete physics. One proxy of incomplete physics is an inaccurate discretization of Laplacian in simulation of wave equation via finite-difference method. We exploit intrinsic one-to-one similarities between timestepping algorithm with Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs), and propose to intersperse CNNs between low-fidelity timesteps. Augmenting neural networks with low-fidelity timestepping algorithms may allow us to take large timesteps while limiting the numerical dispersion artifacts. While simulating the wave-equation with low-fidelity timestepping algorithm, by correcting the wavefield several time during propagation, we hope to limit the numerical dispersion artifact introduced by a poor discretization of the Laplacian. As a proof of concept, we demonstrate this principle by correcting for numerical dispersion by keeping the velocity model fixed, and varying the source locations to generate training and testing pairs for our supervised learning algorithm.