Event Generation and Statistical Sampling with Deep Generative Models

2019 
We present a study for the generation of events from a physical process with deep generative models. The simulation of physical processes requires not only the production of physical events, but also to ensure these events occur with the correct frequencies. We investigate the feasibility of learning the event generation and the frequency of occurrence with Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) and Variational Autoencoders (VAEs) to produce events like Monte Carlo generators. We study three processes: a simple two-body decay, the processes $e^+e^-\to Z \to l^+l^-$ and $p p \to t\bar{t} $ including the decay of the top quarks and a simulation of the detector response. We find that the tested GAN architectures and the standard VAE are not able to learn the distributions precisely. By buffering density information of encoded Monte Carlo events given the encoder of a VAE we are able to construct a prior for the sampling of new events from the decoder that yields distributions that are in very good agreement with real Monte Carlo events and are generated several orders of magnitude faster. Applications of this work include generic density estimation and sampling, targeted event generation via a principal component analysis of encoded ground truth data, anomaly detection and more efficient importance sampling, e.g. for the phase space integration of matrix elements in quantum field theories.
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