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Dynamic Mode Decomposition and Its Variants

Peter J. Schmid

2021Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics605 citationsDOI

Abstract

Dynamic mode decomposition (DMD) is a factorization and dimensionality reduction technique for data sequences. In its most common form, it processes high-dimensional sequential measurements, extracts coherent structures, isolates dynamic behavior, and reduces complex evolution processes to their dominant features and essential components. The decomposition is intimately related to Koopman analysis and, since its introduction, has spawned various extensions, generalizations, and improvements. It has been applied to numerical and experimental data sequences taken from simple to complex fluid systems and has also had an impact beyond fluid dynamics in, for example, video surveillance, epidemiology, neurobiology, and financial engineering. This review focuses on the practical aspects of DMD and its variants, as well as on its usage and characteristics as a quantitative tool for the analysis of complex fluid processes.

Topics & Concepts

Dynamic mode decompositionComputer scienceDecompositionDimensionality reductionFactorizationMatrix decompositionCurse of dimensionalityMode (computer interface)Simple (philosophy)AlgorithmTheoretical computer scienceBiological systemArtificial intelligenceMachine learningPhysicsChemistryBiologyOperating systemPhilosophyEpistemologyOrganic chemistryEigenvalues and eigenvectorsQuantum mechanicsModel Reduction and Neural NetworksMachine Fault Diagnosis TechniquesComputational Physics and Python Applications