Author
Listed:
- Sydney Otten
(Institute for Mathematics, Astro- and Particle Physics IMAPP Radboud Universiteit
GRAPPA, University of Amsterdam)
- Sascha Caron
(Institute for Mathematics, Astro- and Particle Physics IMAPP Radboud Universiteit
Nikhef)
- Wieske de Swart
(Institute for Mathematics, Astro- and Particle Physics IMAPP Radboud Universiteit)
- Melissa van Beekveld
(Institute for Mathematics, Astro- and Particle Physics IMAPP Radboud Universiteit
Nikhef)
- Luc Hendriks
(Institute for Mathematics, Astro- and Particle Physics IMAPP Radboud Universiteit)
- Caspar van Leeuwen
(SURFsara)
- Damian Podareanu
(SURFsara)
- Roberto Ruiz de Austri
(Instituto de Fisica Corpuscular, IFIC-UV/CSIC University of Valencia)
- Rob Verheyen
(Institute for Mathematics, Astro- and Particle Physics IMAPP Radboud Universiteit)
Abstract
Simulating nature and in particular processes in particle physics require expensive computations and sometimes would take much longer than scientists can afford. Here, we explore ways to a solution for this problem by investigating recent advances in generative modeling and present a study for the generation of events from a physical process with deep generative models. The simulation of physical processes requires not only the production of physical events, but to also ensure that these events occur with the correct frequencies. We investigate the feasibility of learning the event generation and the frequency of occurrence with several generative machine learning models to produce events like Monte Carlo generators. We study three processes: a simple two-body decay, the processes e+e− → Z → l+l− and $$pp\to t\bar{t}$$ p p → t t ¯ including the decay of the top quarks and a simulation of the detector response. By buffering density information of encoded Monte Carlo events given the encoder of a Variational Autoencoder we are able to construct a prior for the sampling of new events from the decoder that yields distributions that are in very good agreement with real Monte Carlo events and are generated several orders of magnitude faster. Applications of this work include generic density estimation and sampling, targeted event generation via a principal component analysis of encoded ground truth data, anomaly detection and more efficient importance sampling, e.g., for the phase space integration of matrix elements in quantum field theories.
Suggested Citation
Sydney Otten & Sascha Caron & Wieske de Swart & Melissa van Beekveld & Luc Hendriks & Caspar van Leeuwen & Damian Podareanu & Roberto Ruiz de Austri & Rob Verheyen, 2021.
"Event generation and statistical sampling for physics with deep generative models and a density information buffer,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 12(1), pages 1-16, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:12:y:2021:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-021-22616-z
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-22616-z
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