English

SOLIS: Physics-Informed Learning of Interpretable Neural Surrogates for Nonlinear Systems

Machine Learning 2026-04-17 v1 Artificial Intelligence Systems and Control Systems and Control

Abstract

Nonlinear system identification must balance physical interpretability with model flexibility. Classical methods yield structured, control-relevant models but rely on rigid parametric forms that often miss complex nonlinearities, whereas Neural ODEs are expressive yet largely black-box. Physics-Informed Neural Networks (PINNs) sit between these extremes, but inverse PINNs typically assume a known governing equation with fixed coefficients, leading to identifiability failures when the true dynamics are unknown or state-dependent. We propose \textbf{SOLIS}, which models unknown dynamics via a \emph{state-conditioned second-order surrogate model} and recasts identification as learning a Quasi-Linear Parameter-Varying (Quasi-LPV) representation, recovering interpretable natural frequency, damping, and gain without presupposing a global equation. SOLIS decouples trajectory reconstruction from parameter estimation and stabilizes training with a cyclic curriculum and \textbf{Local Physics Hints} windowed ridge-regression anchors that mitigate optimization collapse. Experiments on benchmarks show accurate parameter-manifold recovery and coherent physical rollouts from sparse data, including regimes where standard inverse methods fail.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2604.14879,
  title  = {SOLIS: Physics-Informed Learning of Interpretable Neural Surrogates for Nonlinear Systems},
  author = {Murat Furkan Mansur and Tufan Kumbasar},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2604.14879},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

in the International Joint Conference on Neural Networks, 2026

R2 v1 2026-07-01T12:12:26.788Z