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PyTorch Implementation of Differentiable ODE Solvers

This library provides ordinary differential equation (ODE) solvers implemented in PyTorch. Backpropagation through ODE solutions is supported using the adjoint method for constant memory cost. For usage of ODE solvers in deep learning applications, see reference [1].

As the solvers are implemented in PyTorch, algorithms in this repository are fully supported to run on the GPU.

Installation

To install latest stable version:

pip install torchdiffeq

To install latest on GitHub:

pip install git+https://github.com/rtqichen/torchdiffeq

Examples

Examples are placed in the examples directory.

We encourage those who are interested in using this library to take a look at examples/ode_demo.py for understanding how to use torchdiffeq to fit a simple spiral ODE.

<p align="center"> <img align="middle" src="./assets/ode_demo.gif" alt="ODE Demo" width="500" height="250" /> </p>

Basic usage

This library provides one main interface odeint which contains general-purpose algorithms for solving initial value problems (IVP), with gradients implemented for all main arguments. An initial value problem consists of an ODE and an initial value,

dy/dt = f(t, y)    y(t_0) = y_0.

The goal of an ODE solver is to find a continuous trajectory satisfying the ODE that passes through the initial condition.

To solve an IVP using the default solver:

from torchdiffeq import odeint

odeint(func, y0, t)

where func is any callable implementing the ordinary differential equation f(t, x), y0 is an any-D Tensor representing the initial values, and t is a 1-D Tensor containing the evaluation points. The initial time is taken to be t[0].

Backpropagation through odeint goes through the internals of the solver. Note that this is not numerically stable for all solvers (but should probably be fine with the default dopri5 method). Instead, we encourage the use of the adjoint method explained in [1], which will allow solving with as many steps as necessary due to O(1) memory usage.

To use the adjoint method:

from torchdiffeq import odeint_adjoint as odeint

odeint(func, y0, t)

odeint_adjoint simply wraps around odeint, but will use only O(1) memory in exchange for solving an adjoint ODE in the backward call.

The biggest gotcha is that func must be a nn.Module when using the adjoint method. This is used to collect parameters of the differential equation.

Differentiable event handling

We allow terminating an ODE solution based on an event function. Backpropagation through most solvers is supported. For usage of event handling in deep learning applications, see reference [2].

This can be invoked with odeint_event:

from torchdiffeq import odeint_event
odeint_event(func, y0, t0, *, event_fn, reverse_time=False, odeint_interface=odeint, **kwargs)

The solve is terminated at an event time t and state y when an element of event_fn(t, y) is equal to zero. Multiple outputs from event_fn can be used to specify multiple event functions, of which the first to trigger will terminate the solve.

Both the event time and final state are returned from odeint_event, and can be differentiated. Gradients will be backpropagated through the event function. NOTE: parameters for the event function must be in the state itself to obtain gradients.

The numerical precision for the event time is determined by the atol argument.

See example of simulating and differentiating through a bouncing ball in examples/bouncing_ball.py. See example code for learning a simple event function in examples/learn_physics.py.

<p align="center"> <img align="middle" src="./assets/bouncing_ball.png" alt="Bouncing Ball" width="500" height="250" /> </p>

Keyword arguments for odeint(_adjoint)

Keyword arguments:

List of ODE Solvers:

Adaptive-step:

Fixed-step:

Additionally, all solvers available through SciPy are wrapped for use with scipy_solver.

For most problems, good choices are the default dopri5, or to use rk4 with options=dict(step_size=...) set appropriately small. Adjusting the tolerances (adaptive solvers) or step size (fixed solvers), will allow for trade-offs between speed and accuracy.

Frequently Asked Questions

Take a look at our FAQ for frequently asked questions.

Further documentation

For details of the adjoint-specific and solver-specific options, check out the further documentation.

References

Applications of differentiable ODE solvers and event handling are discussed in these two papers:

Ricky T. Q. Chen, Yulia Rubanova, Jesse Bettencourt, David Duvenaud. "Neural Ordinary Differential Equations." Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems. 2018. [arxiv]

@article{chen2018neuralode,
  title={Neural Ordinary Differential Equations},
  author={Chen, Ricky T. Q. and Rubanova, Yulia and Bettencourt, Jesse and Duvenaud, David},
  journal={Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems},
  year={2018}
}

Ricky T. Q. Chen, Brandon Amos, Maximilian Nickel. "Learning Neural Event Functions for Ordinary Differential Equations." International Conference on Learning Representations. 2021. [arxiv]

@article{chen2021eventfn,
  title={Learning Neural Event Functions for Ordinary Differential Equations},
  author={Chen, Ricky T. Q. and Amos, Brandon and Nickel, Maximilian},
  journal={International Conference on Learning Representations},
  year={2021}
}

The seminorm option for computing adjoints is discussed in

Patrick Kidger, Ricky T. Q. Chen, Terry Lyons. "'Hey, that’s not an ODE': Faster ODE Adjoints via Seminorms." International Conference on Machine Learning. 2021. [arxiv]

@article{kidger2021hey,
  title={"Hey, that's not an ODE": Faster ODE Adjoints via Seminorms.},
  author={Kidger, Patrick and Chen, Ricky T. Q. and Lyons, Terry J.},
  journal={International Conference on Machine Learning},
  year={2021}
}

If you found this library useful in your research, please consider citing.

@misc{torchdiffeq,
	author={Chen, Ricky T. Q.},
	title={torchdiffeq},
	year={2018},
	url={https://github.com/rtqichen/torchdiffeq},
}