ECLIPSE: An Evolutionary Computation Library for Instrumentation Prototyping in Scientific Engineering
cs.NE
/ Authors
Max Foreback, Evan Imata, Vincent Ragusa, Jacob Weiler, Jonathan Sy, Christina Shao, Joey Wagner, Dylan Wells, Rick Marcusen, Katherine G. Skocelas
and 11 more authors
Aman Hafez, Amy Conolly, Kyle R. Helson, Rajiv Ramnath, Wolfgang Banzhaf, Charles Ofria, Marcin Pilinski, Bryan Reynolds, Anselmo C. Pontes, Emily Dolson, Julie Rolla
/ Abstract
Designing scientific instrumentation often requires exploring large, highly constrained design spaces using computationally expensive physics simulations. These simulators pose substantial challenges for integrating evolutionary computation (EC) into scientific design workflows. EC typically requires numerous design evaluations, making the integration of slow, low-throughput simulators challenging, as they are optimized for accuracy and ease of use rather than throughput. We present ECLIPSE, an evolutionary computation framework built to interface directly with complex, domain-specific simulation tools while supporting flexible geometric and parametric representations of scientific hardware. ECLIPSE provides a modular architecture consisting of (1) Individuals, which encode hardware designs using domain-aware, physically constrained representations; (2) Evaluators, which prepare simulation inputs, invoke external simulators, and translate the simulator's outputs into fitness measures; and (3) Evolvers, which implement EC algorithms suitable for this domain. We evolve solutions for two novel space-science applications: 3D antennas optimized for directional sensitivity and spacecraft geometries optimized for drag reduction. Notably, we identify antennas with directional sensitivity roughly comparable to the expected sensitivity of two-antenna interferometric arrays, representing potential cost-savings. ECLIPSE enables interdisciplinary teams of physicists, engineers, and EC researchers to collaboratively explore designs for scientific hardware while leveraging existing domain-specific simulation software.