Constructive Models of Discrete and Continuous Physical Phenomena

This paper studies the semantics of models for discrete physical phenomena, such as rigid body collisions and switching in electronic circuits. This paper combines generalized functions (specifically the Dirac delta function), superdense time, modal models, and constructive semantics to get a rich,...

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Main Author: Edward A. Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2014-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/6873221/
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spelling doaj-005338691c664c95bd2dadc5c316c5232021-03-29T19:30:22ZengIEEEIEEE Access2169-35362014-01-01279782110.1109/ACCESS.2014.23457596873221Constructive Models of Discrete and Continuous Physical PhenomenaEdward A. Lee0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5663-0584Department of Electrical and Engineering Computer Sciences, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USAThis paper studies the semantics of models for discrete physical phenomena, such as rigid body collisions and switching in electronic circuits. This paper combines generalized functions (specifically the Dirac delta function), superdense time, modal models, and constructive semantics to get a rich, flexible, efficient, and rigorous approach to modeling such systems. It shows that many physical scenarios that have been problematic for modeling techniques manifest as nonconstructive models, and that constructive versions of some of the models properly reflect uncertainty in the behavior of the physical systems that plausibly arise from the principles of the underlying physics. This paper argues that these modeling difficulties are not reasonably solved by more detailed continuous models of the underlying physical phenomena. Such more detailed models simply shift the uncertainty to other aspects of the model. Since such detailed models come with a high computational cost, there is little justification in using them unless the goal of modeling is specifically to understand these more detailed physical processes. All models in this paper are implemented in the Ptolemy II modeling and simulation environment and made available online.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/6873221/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Edward A. Lee
spellingShingle Edward A. Lee
Constructive Models of Discrete and Continuous Physical Phenomena
IEEE Access
author_facet Edward A. Lee
author_sort Edward A. Lee
title Constructive Models of Discrete and Continuous Physical Phenomena
title_short Constructive Models of Discrete and Continuous Physical Phenomena
title_full Constructive Models of Discrete and Continuous Physical Phenomena
title_fullStr Constructive Models of Discrete and Continuous Physical Phenomena
title_full_unstemmed Constructive Models of Discrete and Continuous Physical Phenomena
title_sort constructive models of discrete and continuous physical phenomena
publisher IEEE
series IEEE Access
issn 2169-3536
publishDate 2014-01-01
description This paper studies the semantics of models for discrete physical phenomena, such as rigid body collisions and switching in electronic circuits. This paper combines generalized functions (specifically the Dirac delta function), superdense time, modal models, and constructive semantics to get a rich, flexible, efficient, and rigorous approach to modeling such systems. It shows that many physical scenarios that have been problematic for modeling techniques manifest as nonconstructive models, and that constructive versions of some of the models properly reflect uncertainty in the behavior of the physical systems that plausibly arise from the principles of the underlying physics. This paper argues that these modeling difficulties are not reasonably solved by more detailed continuous models of the underlying physical phenomena. Such more detailed models simply shift the uncertainty to other aspects of the model. Since such detailed models come with a high computational cost, there is little justification in using them unless the goal of modeling is specifically to understand these more detailed physical processes. All models in this paper are implemented in the Ptolemy II modeling and simulation environment and made available online.
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/6873221/
work_keys_str_mv AT edwardalee constructivemodelsofdiscreteandcontinuousphysicalphenomena
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