SRC/zgedmd.f90(3) Library Functions Manual SRC/zgedmd.f90(3)

SRC/zgedmd.f90


subroutine zgedmd (jobs, jobz, jobr, jobf, whtsvd, m, n, x, ldx, y, ldy, nrnk, tol, k, eigs, z, ldz, res, b, ldb, w, ldw, s, lds, zwork, lzwork, rwork, lrwork, iwork, liwork, info)
ZGEDMD computes the Dynamic Mode Decomposition (DMD) for a pair of data snapshot matrices.

ZGEDMD computes the Dynamic Mode Decomposition (DMD) for a pair of data snapshot matrices.

Purpose:

    ZGEDMD computes the Dynamic Mode Decomposition (DMD) for
    a pair of data snapshot matrices. For the input matrices
    X and Y such that Y = A*X with an unaccessible matrix
    A, ZGEDMD computes a certain number of Ritz pairs of A using
    the standard Rayleigh-Ritz extraction from a subspace of
    range(X) that is determined using the leading left singular
    vectors of X. Optionally, ZGEDMD returns the residuals
    of the computed Ritz pairs, the information needed for
    a refinement of the Ritz vectors, or the eigenvectors of
    the Exact DMD.
    For further details see the references listed
    below. For more details of the implementation see [3].

References:

    [1] P. Schmid: Dynamic mode decomposition of numerical
        and experimental data,
        Journal of Fluid Mechanics 656, 5-28, 2010.
    [2] Z. Drmac, I. Mezic, R. Mohr: Data driven modal
        decompositions: analysis and enhancements,
        SIAM J. on Sci. Comp. 40 (4), A2253-A2285, 2018.
    [3] Z. Drmac: A LAPACK implementation of the Dynamic
        Mode Decomposition I. Technical report. AIMDyn Inc.
        and LAPACK Working Note 298.
    [4] J. Tu, C. W. Rowley, D. M. Luchtenburg, S. L.
        Brunton, N. Kutz: On Dynamic Mode Decomposition:
        Theory and Applications, Journal of Computational
        Dynamics 1(2), 391 -421, 2014.

Developed and supported by:

    Developed and coded by Zlatko Drmac, Faculty of Science,
    University of Zagreb;  drmac@math.hr
    In cooperation with
    AIMdyn Inc., Santa Barbara, CA.
    and supported by
    - DARPA SBIR project 'Koopman Operator-Based Forecasting
    for Nonstationary Processes from Near-Term, Limited
    Observational Data' Contract No: W31P4Q-21-C-0007
    - DARPA PAI project 'Physics-Informed Machine Learning
    Methodologies' Contract No: HR0011-18-9-0033
    - DARPA MoDyL project 'A Data-Driven, Operator-Theoretic
    Framework for Space-Time Analysis of Process Dynamics'
    Contract No: HR0011-16-C-0116
    Any opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations
    expressed in this material are those of the author and
    do not necessarily reflect the views of the DARPA SBIR
    Program Office

Distribution Statement A:

    Approved for Public Release, Distribution Unlimited.
    Cleared by DARPA on September 29, 2022

Parameters

JOBS
    JOBS (input) CHARACTER*1
    Determines whether the initial data snapshots are scaled
    by a diagonal matrix.
    'S' :: The data snapshots matrices X and Y are multiplied
           with a diagonal matrix D so that X*D has unit
           nonzero columns (in the Euclidean 2-norm)
    'C' :: The snapshots are scaled as with the 'S' option.
           If it is found that an i-th column of X is zero
           vector and the corresponding i-th column of Y is
           non-zero, then the i-th column of Y is set to
           zero and a warning flag is raised.
    'Y' :: The data snapshots matrices X and Y are multiplied
           by a diagonal matrix D so that Y*D has unit
           nonzero columns (in the Euclidean 2-norm)
    'N' :: No data scaling.

JOBZ

    JOBZ (input) CHARACTER*1
    Determines whether the eigenvectors (Koopman modes) will
    be computed.
    'V' :: The eigenvectors (Koopman modes) will be computed
           and returned in the matrix Z.
           See the description of Z.
    'F' :: The eigenvectors (Koopman modes) will be returned
           in factored form as the product X(:,1:K)*W, where X
           contains a POD basis (leading left singular vectors
           of the data matrix X) and W contains the eigenvectors
           of the corresponding Rayleigh quotient.
           See the descriptions of K, X, W, Z.
    'N' :: The eigenvectors are not computed.

JOBR

    JOBR (input) CHARACTER*1
    Determines whether to compute the residuals.
    'R' :: The residuals for the computed eigenpairs will be
           computed and stored in the array RES.
           See the description of RES.
           For this option to be legal, JOBZ must be 'V'.
    'N' :: The residuals are not computed.

JOBF

    JOBF (input) CHARACTER*1
    Specifies whether to store information needed for post-
    processing (e.g. computing refined Ritz vectors)
    'R' :: The matrix needed for the refinement of the Ritz
           vectors is computed and stored in the array B.
           See the description of B.
    'E' :: The unscaled eigenvectors of the Exact DMD are
           computed and returned in the array B. See the
           description of B.
    'N' :: No eigenvector refinement data is computed.

WHTSVD

    WHTSVD (input) INTEGER, WHSTVD in { 1, 2, 3, 4 }
    Allows for a selection of the SVD algorithm from the
    LAPACK library.
    1 :: ZGESVD (the QR SVD algorithm)
    2 :: ZGESDD (the Divide and Conquer algorithm; if enough
         workspace available, this is the fastest option)
    3 :: ZGESVDQ (the preconditioned QR SVD  ; this and 4
         are the most accurate options)
    4 :: ZGEJSV (the preconditioned Jacobi SVD; this and 3
         are the most accurate options)
    For the four methods above, a significant difference in
    the accuracy of small singular values is possible if
    the snapshots vary in norm so that X is severely
    ill-conditioned. If small (smaller than EPS*||X||)
    singular values are of interest and JOBS=='N',  then
    the options (3, 4) give the most accurate results, where
    the option 4 is slightly better and with stronger
    theoretical background.
    If JOBS=='S', i.e. the columns of X will be normalized,
    then all methods give nearly equally accurate results.

M

    M (input) INTEGER, M>= 0
    The state space dimension (the row dimension of X, Y).

N

    N (input) INTEGER, 0 <= N <= M
    The number of data snapshot pairs
    (the number of columns of X and Y).

LDX

    X (input/output) COMPLEX(KIND=WP) M-by-N array
    > On entry, X contains the data snapshot matrix X. It is
    assumed that the column norms of X are in the range of
    the normalized floating point numbers.
    < On exit, the leading K columns of X contain a POD basis,
    i.e. the leading K left singular vectors of the input
    data matrix X, U(:,1:K). All N columns of X contain all
    left singular vectors of the input matrix X.
    See the descriptions of K, Z and W.
LDX (input) INTEGER, LDX >= M
    The leading dimension of the array X.

Y

    Y (input/workspace/output) COMPLEX(KIND=WP) M-by-N array
    > On entry, Y contains the data snapshot matrix Y
    < On exit,
    If JOBR == 'R', the leading K columns of Y  contain
    the residual vectors for the computed Ritz pairs.
    See the description of RES.
    If JOBR == 'N', Y contains the original input data,
                    scaled according to the value of JOBS.

LDY

    LDY (input) INTEGER , LDY >= M
    The leading dimension of the array Y.

NRNK

    NRNK (input) INTEGER
    Determines the mode how to compute the numerical rank,
    i.e. how to truncate small singular values of the input
    matrix X. On input, if
    NRNK = -1 :: i-th singular value sigma(i) is truncated
                 if sigma(i) <= TOL*sigma(1)
                 This option is recommended.
    NRNK = -2 :: i-th singular value sigma(i) is truncated
                 if sigma(i) <= TOL*sigma(i-1)
                 This option is included for R&D purposes.
                 It requires highly accurate SVD, which
                 may not be feasible.
    The numerical rank can be enforced by using positive
    value of NRNK as follows:
    0 < NRNK <= N :: at most NRNK largest singular values
    will be used. If the number of the computed nonzero
    singular values is less than NRNK, then only those
    nonzero values will be used and the actually used
    dimension is less than NRNK. The actual number of
    the nonzero singular values is returned in the variable
    K. See the descriptions of TOL and  K.

TOL

    TOL (input) REAL(KIND=WP), 0 <= TOL < 1
    The tolerance for truncating small singular values.
    See the description of NRNK.

K

    K (output) INTEGER,  0 <= K <= N
    The dimension of the POD basis for the data snapshot
    matrix X and the number of the computed Ritz pairs.
    The value of K is determined according to the rule set
    by the parameters NRNK and TOL.
    See the descriptions of NRNK and TOL.

EIGS

    EIGS (output) COMPLEX(KIND=WP) N-by-1 array
    The leading K (K<=N) entries of EIGS contain
    the computed eigenvalues (Ritz values).
    See the descriptions of K, and Z.

Z

    Z (workspace/output) COMPLEX(KIND=WP)  M-by-N array
    If JOBZ =='V' then Z contains the  Ritz vectors.  Z(:,i)
    is an eigenvector of the i-th Ritz value; ||Z(:,i)||_2=1.
    If JOBZ == 'F', then the Z(:,i)'s are given implicitly as
    the columns of X(:,1:K)*W(1:K,1:K), i.e. X(:,1:K)*W(:,i)
    is an eigenvector corresponding to EIGS(i). The columns
    of W(1:k,1:K) are the computed eigenvectors of the
    K-by-K Rayleigh quotient.
    See the descriptions of EIGS, X and W.

LDZ

    LDZ (input) INTEGER , LDZ >= M
    The leading dimension of the array Z.

RES

    RES (output) REAL(KIND=WP) N-by-1 array
    RES(1:K) contains the residuals for the K computed
    Ritz pairs,
    RES(i) = || A * Z(:,i) - EIGS(i)*Z(:,i))||_2.
    See the description of EIGS and Z.

B

    B (output) COMPLEX(KIND=WP)  M-by-N array.
    IF JOBF =='R', B(1:M,1:K) contains A*U(:,1:K), and can
    be used for computing the refined vectors; see further
    details in the provided references.
    If JOBF == 'E', B(1:M,1:K) contains
    A*U(:,1:K)*W(1:K,1:K), which are the vectors from the
    Exact DMD, up to scaling by the inverse eigenvalues.
    If JOBF =='N', then B is not referenced.
    See the descriptions of X, W, K.

LDB

    LDB (input) INTEGER, LDB >= M
    The leading dimension of the array B.

W

    W (workspace/output) COMPLEX(KIND=WP) N-by-N array
    On exit, W(1:K,1:K) contains the K computed
    eigenvectors of the matrix Rayleigh quotient.
    The Ritz vectors (returned in Z) are the
    product of X (containing a POD basis for the input
    matrix X) and W. See the descriptions of K, S, X and Z.
    W is also used as a workspace to temporarily store the
    right singular vectors of X.

LDW

    LDW (input) INTEGER, LDW >= N
    The leading dimension of the array W.

S

    S (workspace/output) COMPLEX(KIND=WP) N-by-N array
    The array S(1:K,1:K) is used for the matrix Rayleigh
    quotient. This content is overwritten during
    the eigenvalue decomposition by ZGEEV.
    See the description of K.

LDS

    LDS (input) INTEGER, LDS >= N
    The leading dimension of the array S.

ZWORK

    ZWORK (workspace/output) COMPLEX(KIND=WP) LZWORK-by-1 array
    ZWORK is used as complex workspace in the complex SVD, as
    specified by WHTSVD (1,2, 3 or 4) and for ZGEEV for computing
    the eigenvalues of a Rayleigh quotient.
    If the call to ZGEDMD is only workspace query, then
    ZWORK(1) contains the minimal complex workspace length and
    ZWORK(2) is the optimal complex workspace length.
    Hence, the length of work is at least 2.
    See the description of LZWORK.

LZWORK

    LZWORK (input) INTEGER
    The minimal length of the workspace vector ZWORK.
    LZWORK is calculated as MAX(LZWORK_SVD, LZWORK_ZGEEV),
    where LZWORK_ZGEEV = MAX( 1, 2*N )  and the minimal
    LZWORK_SVD is calculated as follows
    If WHTSVD == 1 :: ZGESVD ::
       LZWORK_SVD = MAX(1,2*MIN(M,N)+MAX(M,N))
    If WHTSVD == 2 :: ZGESDD ::
       LZWORK_SVD = 2*MIN(M,N)*MIN(M,N)+2*MIN(M,N)+MAX(M,N)
    If WHTSVD == 3 :: ZGESVDQ ::
       LZWORK_SVD = obtainable by a query
    If WHTSVD == 4 :: ZGEJSV ::
       LZWORK_SVD = obtainable by a query
    If on entry LZWORK = -1, then a workspace query is
    assumed and the procedure only computes the minimal
    and the optimal workspace lengths and returns them in
    LZWORK(1) and LZWORK(2), respectively.

RWORK

    RWORK (workspace/output) REAL(KIND=WP) LRWORK-by-1 array
    On exit, RWORK(1:N) contains the singular values of
    X (for JOBS=='N') or column scaled X (JOBS=='S', 'C').
    If WHTSVD==4, then RWORK(N+1) and RWORK(N+2) contain
    scaling factor RWORK(N+2)/RWORK(N+1) used to scale X
    and Y to avoid overflow in the SVD of X.
    This may be of interest if the scaling option is off
    and as many as possible smallest eigenvalues are
    desired to the highest feasible accuracy.
    If the call to ZGEDMD is only workspace query, then
    RWORK(1) contains the minimal workspace length.
    See the description of LRWORK.

LRWORK

    LRWORK (input) INTEGER
    The minimal length of the workspace vector RWORK.
    LRWORK is calculated as follows:
    LRWORK = MAX(1, N+LRWORK_SVD,N+LRWORK_ZGEEV), where
    LRWORK_ZGEEV = MAX(1,2*N) and RWORK_SVD is the real workspace
    for the SVD subroutine determined by the input parameter
    WHTSVD.
    If WHTSVD == 1 :: ZGESVD ::
       LRWORK_SVD = 5*MIN(M,N)
    If WHTSVD == 2 :: ZGESDD ::
       LRWORK_SVD =  MAX(5*MIN(M,N)*MIN(M,N)+7*MIN(M,N),
       2*MAX(M,N)*MIN(M,N)+2*MIN(M,N)*MIN(M,N)+MIN(M,N) ) )
    If WHTSVD == 3 :: ZGESVDQ ::
       LRWORK_SVD = obtainable by a query
    If WHTSVD == 4 :: ZGEJSV ::
       LRWORK_SVD = obtainable by a query
    If on entry LRWORK = -1, then a workspace query is
    assumed and the procedure only computes the minimal
    real workspace length and returns it in RWORK(1).

IWORK

    IWORK (workspace/output) INTEGER LIWORK-by-1 array
    Workspace that is required only if WHTSVD equals
    2 , 3 or 4. (See the description of WHTSVD).
    If on entry LWORK =-1 or LIWORK=-1, then the
    minimal length of IWORK is computed and returned in
    IWORK(1). See the description of LIWORK.

LIWORK

    LIWORK (input) INTEGER
    The minimal length of the workspace vector IWORK.
    If WHTSVD == 1, then only IWORK(1) is used; LIWORK >=1
    If WHTSVD == 2, then LIWORK >= MAX(1,8*MIN(M,N))
    If WHTSVD == 3, then LIWORK >= MAX(1,M+N-1)
    If WHTSVD == 4, then LIWORK >= MAX(3,M+3*N)
    If on entry LIWORK = -1, then a workspace query is
    assumed and the procedure only computes the minimal
    and the optimal workspace lengths for  ZWORK, RWORK and
    IWORK. See the descriptions of ZWORK, RWORK and IWORK.

INFO

    INFO (output) INTEGER
    -i < 0 :: On entry, the i-th argument had an
              illegal value
       = 0 :: Successful return.
       = 1 :: Void input. Quick exit (M=0 or N=0).
       = 2 :: The SVD computation of X did not converge.
              Suggestion: Check the input data and/or
              repeat with different WHTSVD.
       = 3 :: The computation of the eigenvalues did not
              converge.
       = 4 :: If data scaling was requested on input and
              the procedure found inconsistency in the data
              such that for some column index i,
              X(:,i) = 0 but Y(:,i) /= 0, then Y(:,i) is set
              to zero if JOBS=='C'. The computation proceeds
              with original or modified data and warning
              flag is set with INFO=4.

Author

Zlatko Drmac

Definition at line 493 of file zgedmd.f90.

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