Abstract:We develop an adversarial-reinforcement learning scheme for microswimmers in statistically homogeneous and isotropic turbulent fluid flows, in both two (2D) and three dimensions (3D). We show that this scheme allows microswimmers to find non-trivial paths, which enable them to reach a target on average in less time than a na\"ive microswimmer, which tries, at any instant of time and at a given position in space, to swim in the direction of the target. We use pseudospectral direct numerical simulations (DNSs) of the 2D and 3D (incompressible) Navier-Stokes equations to obtain the turbulent flows. We then introduce passive microswimmers that try to swim along a given direction in these flows; the microswimmwers do not affect the flow, but they are advected by it. Two, non-dimensional, control parameters play important roles in our learning scheme: (a) the ratio $\tilde{V}_s$ of the microswimmer's bare velocity $V_s$ and the root-mean-square (rms) velocity $u_{rms}$ of the turbulent fluid; and (b) the product $\tilde{B}$ of the microswimmer-response time $B$ and the rms vorticity $\omega_{rms}$ of the fluid. We show that, in a substantial part of the $\tilde{V}_s-\tilde{B}$ plane, the average time required for the microswimmers to reach the target, by using our adversarial-learning scheme, eventually reduces below the average time taken by microswimmers that follow the na\"ive strategy.
Abstract:Water saturation is an important property in reservoir engineering domain. Thus, satisfactory classification of water saturation from seismic attributes is beneficial for reservoir characterization. However, diverse and non-linear nature of subsurface attributes makes the classification task difficult. In this context, this paper proposes a generalized Support Vector Data Description (SVDD) based novel classification framework to classify water saturation into two classes (Class high and Class low) from three seismic attributes seismic impedance, amplitude envelop, and seismic sweetness. G-metric means and program execution time are used to quantify the performance of the proposed framework along with established supervised classifiers. The documented results imply that the proposed framework is superior to existing classifiers. The present study is envisioned to contribute in further reservoir modeling.
Abstract:Evaluation of hydrocarbon reservoir requires classification of petrophysical properties from available dataset. However, characterization of reservoir attributes is difficult due to the nonlinear and heterogeneous nature of the subsurface physical properties. In this context, present study proposes a generalized one class classification framework based on Support Vector Data Description (SVDD) to classify a reservoir characteristic water saturation into two classes (Class high and Class low) from four logs namely gamma ray, neutron porosity, bulk density, and P sonic using an imbalanced dataset. A comparison is carried out among proposed framework and different supervised classification algorithms in terms of g metric means and execution time. Experimental results show that proposed framework has outperformed other classifiers in terms of these performance evaluators. It is envisaged that the classification analysis performed in this study will be useful in further reservoir modeling.