\section{State of the Art and Limits of Current Practice} \textbf{What has been done? What are the limits of current practice?} This section answers these Heilmeier questions by examining how nuclear reactors operate today. Current approaches—both human-centered and formal methods—cannot provide autonomous control with end-to-end correctness guarantees. Three subsections structure this analysis: reactor operators and their operating procedures, the fundamental limitations of human-based operation, and formal methods approaches that verify discrete logic or continuous dynamics but not both together. Understanding these limits establishes the verification gap that Section 3 addresses through compositional hybrid synthesis. \subsection{Current Reactor Procedures and Operation} Understanding the limits of current practice requires first examining how nuclear plants operate today. Three aspects structure this analysis: the hierarchy of procedures, the role of operators in executing them, and the operational modes that govern reactor control. Nuclear plant procedures form a strict hierarchy: Normal operating procedures govern routine operations, abnormal operating procedures handle off-normal conditions, Emergency Operating Procedures (EOPs) manage design-basis accidents, Severe Accident Management Guidelines (SAMGs) address beyond-design-basis events, and Extensive Damage Mitigation Guidelines (EDMGs) cover catastrophic damage. These procedures must comply with 10 CFR 50.34(b)(6)(ii); NUREG-0899 provides development guidance~\cite{NUREG-0899, 10CFR50.34}. Procedure development relies on expert judgment and simulator validation—not formal verification. 10 CFR 55.59~\cite{10CFR55.59} requires rigorous assessment through technical evaluation, simulator validation testing, and biennial review. Yet key safety properties escape formal verification. Mathematical proofs confirming that procedures cover all possible plant states, that required actions complete within available timeframes, or that safety invariants hold across procedure-set transitions do not exist. \textbf{LIMITATION:} \textit{Procedures lack formal verification of correctness and completeness.} Current procedure development relies on expert judgment and simulator validation—not mathematical proof. No proof exists that procedures cover all possible plant states, that required actions complete within available timeframes, or that transitions between procedure sets maintain safety invariants. Paper-based procedures cannot ensure correct application. Even computer-based procedure systems lack the formal guarantees automated reasoning could provide. Nuclear plants operate with multiple control modes. Automatic control maintains target parameters through continuous reactivity adjustment. Manual control allows operators to directly manipulate the reactor. Various intermediate modes bridge these extremes. In typical pressurized water reactor operation, the reactor control system automatically maintains a floating average temperature, compensating for power demand changes through reactivity feedback loops alone. Safety systems already employ extensive automation. Reactor Protection Systems trip automatically on safety signals with millisecond response times. Engineered safety features actuate automatically on accident signals—no operator action required. This division between automated and human-controlled functions reveals the fundamental challenge of hybrid control. Highly automated systems already handle reactor protection: automatic trips on safety parameters, emergency core cooling actuation, containment isolation, and basic process control~\cite{WRPS.Description, gentillon_westinghouse_1999}. Human operators, meanwhile, retain control of strategic decision-making: power level changes, startup/shutdown sequences, mode transitions, and procedure implementation. This hybrid structure—discrete human decisions combined with continuous automated control—forms the basis for autonomous hybrid control systems. \subsection{Human Factors in Nuclear Accidents} The previous subsection established that procedures lack formal verification despite rigorous development. This represents only half the reliability challenge. Even perfect procedures cannot guarantee safe operation when humans execute them imperfectly. Human operators—the second pillar of current practice—introduce reliability limitations independent of procedure quality. While procedures define what to do, human operators determine when and how—introducing persistent failure modes. Current-generation nuclear power plants employ over 3,600 active NRC-licensed reactor operators in the United States~\cite{operator_statistics}. These operators divide into Reactor Operators (ROs), who manipulate reactor controls, and Senior Reactor Operators (SROs), who direct plant operations and serve as shift supervisors~\cite{10CFR55}. Staffing typically requires at least two ROs and one SRO for current-generation units~\cite{10CFR50.54}. Becoming a reactor operator requires several years of training. Despite decades of improvements in training and procedures, human error persistently contributes to nuclear safety incidents—a persistence that motivates formal automated control with mathematical safety guarantees. Under 10 CFR Part 55, operators hold legal authority to make critical decisions, including authority to depart from normal regulations during emergencies. The Three Mile Island (TMI) accident demonstrated how personnel error, design deficiencies, and component failures combine to cause disaster: operators misread confusing and contradictory indications, then shut off the emergency water system~\cite{Kemeny1979}. The President's Commission on TMI identified a fundamental ambiguity: placing responsibility for safe power plant operations on the licensee without formally verifying that operators can fulfill this responsibility does not guarantee safety. This tension between operational flexibility and safety assurance remains unresolved. The person responsible for reactor safety often becomes the root cause of failure. Multiple independent analyses converge on a striking statistic: human error accounts for 70--80\% of nuclear power plant events, compared to approximately 20\% for equipment failures~\cite{WNA2020}. More significantly, human factors—poor safety management and safety culture—caused all severe accidents at nuclear power plants: Three Mile Island, Chernobyl, and Fukushima Daiichi~\cite{hogberg_root_2013}. A detailed analysis of 190 events at Chinese nuclear power plants from 2007--2020~\cite{zhang_analysis_2025} found that 53\% of events involved active errors, while 92\% were associated with latent errors---organizational and systemic weaknesses that create conditions for failure. \textbf{LIMITATION:} \textit{Human factors impose fundamental reliability limits that training alone cannot overcome.} Four decades of improvements have failed to eliminate human error—these limitations are fundamental to human-driven control, not remediable defects. \subsection{Formal Methods} The previous two subsections revealed two critical limitations of current practice: procedures lack formal verification, and human operators introduce persistent reliability issues that four decades of training improvements have failed to eliminate. Training and procedural improvements cannot solve these problems. Formal methods might offer mathematical guarantees of correctness that eliminate both human error and procedural ambiguity. Even the most advanced formal methods applications in nuclear control leave a critical verification gap for autonomous hybrid systems. This subsection examines two approaches illustrating this gap. HARDENS verified discrete logic without continuous dynamics. Differential dynamic logic handles hybrid verification only post-hoc. Each demonstrates the current state of formal methods while revealing the verification gap this research addresses. \subsubsection{HARDENS: The State of Formal Methods in Nuclear Control} The High Assurance Rigorous Digital Engineering for Nuclear Safety (HARDENS) project represents the most advanced application of formal methods to nuclear reactor control systems to date~\cite{Kiniry2024}. HARDENS addressed a fundamental dilemma: existing U.S. nuclear control rooms rely on analog technologies from the 1950s--60s. These technologies incur significant risk and cost compared to modern control systems. The NRC contracted Galois, a formal methods firm, to demonstrate that Model-Based Systems Engineering and formal methods could design, verify, and implement a complex protection system meeting regulatory criteria at a fraction of typical cost. The project delivered a Reactor Trip System (RTS) implementation with full traceability from NRC Request for Proposals and IEEE standards through formal architecture specifications to verified software. HARDENS employed formal methods tools and techniques across the verification hierarchy. High-level specifications used Lando, SysMLv2, and FRET (NASA Formal Requirements Elicitation Tool) to capture stakeholder requirements, domain engineering, certification requirements, and safety requirements. Requirements were analyzed for consistency, completeness, and realizability using SAT and SMT solvers. Executable formal models used Cryptol to create a behavioral model of the entire RTS, including all subsystems, components, and limited digital twin models of sensors, actuators, and compute infrastructure. Automatic code synthesis generated verifiable C implementations and SystemVerilog hardware implementations directly from Cryptol models---eliminating the traditional gap between specification and implementation where errors commonly arise. Despite its accomplishments, HARDENS has a fundamental limitation for hybrid control synthesis: the project addressed only discrete digital control logic, leaving continuous reactor dynamics unmodeled and unverified. The Reactor Trip System specification and verification covered discrete state transitions (trip/no-trip decisions), digital sensor input processing through discrete logic, and discrete actuation outputs (reactor trip commands). Continuous reactor physics remained unaddressed. Real reactor safety depends on the interaction between continuous processes—temperature, pressure, neutron flux—evolving in response to discrete control decisions. HARDENS verified the discrete controller in isolation, not the closed-loop hybrid system behavior. \textbf{LIMITATION:} \textit{HARDENS addressed discrete control logic without continuous dynamics or hybrid system verification.} Verifying discrete control logic alone provides no guarantee that the closed-loop system exhibits desired continuous behavior such as stability, convergence to setpoints, or maintained safety margins. HARDENS also faced deployment maturity constraints beyond the technical limitation of omitting continuous dynamics. The project produced a demonstrator system at Technology Readiness Level 2--3 (analytical proof of concept with laboratory breadboard validation) rather than a deployment-ready system validated through extended operational testing. The NRC Final Report explicitly notes~\cite{Kiniry2024} that all material is considered in development, not a finalized product, and that ``The demonstration of its technical soundness was to be at a level consistent with satisfaction of the current regulatory criteria, although with no explicit demonstration of how regulatory requirements are met.'' The project did not include deployment in actual nuclear facilities, testing with real reactor systems under operational conditions, side-by-side validation with operational analog RTS systems, systematic failure mode testing (radiation effects, electromagnetic interference, temperature extremes), NRC licensing review, or human factors validation with licensed operators in realistic control room scenarios. \textbf{LIMITATION:} \textit{HARDENS achieved TRL 2--3 without experimental validation.} While formal verification provides mathematical correctness guarantees for the implemented discrete logic, the gap between formal verification and actual system deployment involves myriad practical considerations: integration with legacy systems, long-term reliability under harsh environments, human-system interaction in realistic operational contexts, and regulatory acceptance of formal methods as primary assurance evidence. \subsubsection{Differential Dynamic Logic: Post-Hoc Hybrid Verification} HARDENS verified discrete control logic without continuous dynamics. Other researchers attacked the problem from the opposite direction: extending temporal logics to handle hybrid systems directly. This complementary approach produced differential dynamic logic (dL). dL introduces two additional operators into temporal logic: the box operator and the diamond operator. The box operator \([\alpha]\phi\) states that for some region \(\phi\), the hybrid system \(\alpha\) always remains within that region. In this way, it is a safety ivariant being enforced for the system. The second operator, the diamond operator \(<\alpha>\phi\) says that for the region \(\phi\), there is at least one trajectory of \(\alpha\) that enters that region. This is a declaration of a liveness property. %source: https://symbolaris.com/logic/dL.html While dL allows for the specification of these liveness and safety properties, actually proving them for a given hybrid system is difficult. Automated proof assistants such as KeYmaera X exist to help develop proofs of systems using dL, but fail for reasonably complex hybrid systems. State space explosion and non-terminating solutions prevent creating system proofs using dL. %Source: that one satellite tracking paper that has the problem with the %gyroscopes overloding and needing to dump speed all the time Approaches have been made to alleviate these issues for nuclear power contexts using contract and decomposition based methods, but are far from a complete methodology to design systems with. %source: Manyu's thesis. Instead, these approaches have been used on systems that have been designed a priori, and require expert knowledge to create the system proofs. \textbf{LIMITATION:} \textit{Logic-based hybrid system verification has not scaled to system design.} While dL and related approaches can verify hybrid systems post-hoc, they require expert knowledge and have been applied only to systems designed a priori. State space explosion prevents their use in the design loop for complex systems like nuclear reactor startup procedures. \subsection{Summary: The Verification Gap} This section answered two Heilmeier questions about current practice: \textbf{What has been done?} Human operators provide operational flexibility but introduce persistent reliability limitations that four decades of training improvements have failed to eliminate. Formal methods provide correctness guarantees but have not scaled to complete hybrid control design. HARDENS verified discrete logic without continuous dynamics. Differential dynamic logic expresses hybrid properties but requires post-design expert analysis and fails to scale to system synthesis. \textbf{What are the limits of current practice?} No existing methodology synthesizes provably correct hybrid controllers from operational procedures with verification integrated into the design process. Current approaches verify either discrete logic or continuous dynamics—never both compositionally. This verification gap prevents autonomous nuclear control with end-to-end correctness guarantees. Two imperatives converge to make this gap urgent: economic necessity (small modular reactors cannot compete with per-megawatt staffing costs matching large conventional plants) and technical opportunity (formal methods tools have matured sufficiently to enable compositional hybrid verification). Section 3 addresses this verification gap by establishing what makes the proposed approach new and why it will succeed.