First working nonlinear reach artifact for the PWR model. TMJets
Taylor-model scheme on the full 10-state closed-loop (unsaturated
ctrl_heatup, ramp reference via augmented time state x[11]).
Status:
T=10s : SUCCESS. 10583 reach-sets. T_c envelope [274.45, 295] C,
n envelope [-5.2e-4, 5.01e-3]. Over-approximation visible
(n can't be negative physically) but tube is sound and
bounded.
T=60s+ : FAILED. Exhausts 50k step budget then hits NaN in
precursor-decay term.
Root cause: prompt-neutron stiffness. Lambda=1e-4s forces TMJets'
adaptive stepper to ~1ms steps to resolve fast dynamics. 10583 steps
for 10s of sim time means we get ~10s/50000 = 2s horizon max before
step budget exhausts — inadequate for heatup's 5-hour obligation.
Remedy (next session): singular-perturbation reduction of the
neutronics. Treat n as quasi-static algebraic function of (T, C, rho)
rather than a dynamic state. Replaces stiff dn/dt with algebraic
relation, removes fast timescale from reach problem. Standard in
reactor-kinetics reach literature.
What this does prove:
- Julia/TMJets framework works for this system (previous
scaling-issue failure is gone with @taylorize'd RHS).
- Bilinear n*rho term handled correctly by Taylor models.
- Ramp reference via augmented time state x[11] is a workable
pattern for time-varying controller references in reach.
What this does NOT prove:
- Anything about heatup safety — 10s horizon is nowhere near the
mode's 5-hour obligation.
Includes sim_heatup.jl, a Rodas5 baseline using the same @taylorize-
able RHS form, for cross-validation of the reach tube against a
nominal trajectory once longer horizons are reachable.
WALKTHROUGH.md updated with the finding.
Hacker-Split: got partway up the Julia reach ladder, identified the
physical bottleneck (stiffness), named the fix (reduced-order PKE).
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>