Skip navigation links

Package org.hipparchus.ode.events

Events

See: Description

Package org.hipparchus.ode.events Description

Events

This package provides classes to handle discrete events occurring during Ordinary Differential Equations integration.

Discrete events detection is based on switching functions. The user provides a simple g(state) function depending on the current time and state. The integrator will monitor the value of the function throughout integration range and will trigger the event when its sign changes. The magnitude of the value is almost irrelevant, it should however be continuous (but not necessarily smooth) for the sake of root finding. The steps are shortened as needed to ensure the events occur at step boundaries (even if the integrator is a fixed-step integrator).

When an event is triggered, several different options are available:

The first case, G-stop, is the most common one. A typical use case is when an ODE must be solved up to some target state is reached, with a known value of the state but an unknown occurrence time. As an example, if we want to monitor a chemical reaction up to some predefined concentration for the first substance, we can use the following switching function setting:

  public double g(final ODEStateAndDerivative state) {
    return state.getState()[0] - targetConcentration;
  }

  public Action eventOccurred(final ODEStateAndDerivative state, final boolean increasing) {
    return STOP;
  }
 

The second case, change state vector or derivatives is encountered when dealing with discontinuous dynamical models. A typical case would be the motion of a spacecraft when thrusters are fired for orbital maneuvers. The acceleration is smooth as long as no maneuver are performed, depending only on gravity, drag, third body attraction, radiation pressure. Firing a thruster introduces a discontinuity that must be handled appropriately by the integrator. In such a case, we would use a switching function setting similar to this:

  public double g(final ODEStateAndDerivative state) {
    return (state.getTime() - tManeuverStart) ∗ (state.getTime() - tManeuverStop);
  }

  public Action eventOccurred(final ODEStateAndDerivative state, final boolean increasing) {
    return RESET_DERIVATIVES;
  }
 

The third case is useful mainly for monitoring purposes, a simple example is:

  public double g(final ODEStateAndDerivative state) {
  final double[] y = state.getState();
    return y[0] - y[1];
  }

  public Action eventOccurred(final ODEStateAndDerivative state, final boolean increasing) {
    logger.log("y0(t) and y1(t) curves cross at t = " + t);
    return CONTINUE;
  }
 

Rules of Event Handling

These rules formalize the concept of event detection and are used to determine when an event must be reported to the user and the order in which events must occur. These rules assume the event handler and g function conform to the documentation on ODEEventHandler and ODEIntegrator.

  1. An event must be detected if the g function has changed signs for longer than maxCheck. Formally, if r is a root of g(t), g has one sign on [r-maxCheck, r) and the opposite sign on (r, r+maxCheck] then r must be detected. Otherwise the root may or may not be detected.
  2. For a given tolerance, h, and root, r, the event may occur at any point on the interval [r-h, r+h]. The tolerance is the larger of the convergence parameter and the convergence settings of the root finder specified when adding the event handler.
  3. At most one event is triggered per root.
  4. Events from the same event detector must alternate between increasing and decreasing events. That is, for every pair of increasing events there must exist an intervening decreasing event and vice-versa.
  5. An event starts occurring when the eventOccurred() method is called. An event stops occurring when eventOccurred() returns or when the handler's resetState() method returns if eventOccured() returned RESET_STATE.
  6. If event A happens before event B then the effects of A occurring are visible to B. (Including resetting the state or derivatives, or stopping)
  7. Events occur in chronological order. If integration is forward and event A happens before event B then the time of event B is greater than or equal to the time of event A.
  8. There is a total order on events. That is for two events A and B either A happens before B or B happens before A.
Skip navigation links

Copyright © 2016–2020 Hipparchus.org. All rights reserved.