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PhysMaster: Building an Autonomous AI Physicist for Theoretical and Computational Physics Research

Tingjia Miao
Jiawen Dai
Jingkun Liu
Jinxin Tan
Muhua Zhang
Wenkai Jin
Yuwen Du
Tian Jin
Xianghe Pang
Zexi Liu
Tu Guo
Zhengliang Zhang
Yunjie Huang
Shuo Chen
Rui Ye
Yuzhi Zhang
Linfeng Zhang
Kun Chen
Wei Wang
Weinan E
Siheng Chen
Main:27 Pages
3 Figures
Bibliography:5 Pages
Abstract

Advances in LLMs have produced agents with knowledge and operational capabilities comparable to human scientists, suggesting potential to assist, accelerate, and automate research. However, existing studies mainly evaluate such systems on well-defined benchmarks or general tasks like literature retrieval, limiting their end-to-end problem-solving ability in open scientific scenarios. This is particularly true in physics, which is abstract, mathematically intensive, and requires integrating analytical reasoning with code-based computation. To address this, we propose PhysMaster, an LLM-based agent functioning as an autonomous theoretical and computational physicist. PhysMaster couples absract reasoning with numerical computation and leverages LANDAU, the Layered Academic Data Universe, which preserves retrieved literature, curated prior knowledge, and validated methodological traces, enhancing decision reliability and stability. It also employs an adaptive exploration strategy balancing efficiency and open-ended exploration, enabling robust performance in ultra-long-horizon tasks. We evaluate PhysMaster on problems from high-energy theory, condensed matter theory to astrophysics, including: (i) acceleration, compressing labor-intensive research from months to hours; (ii) automation, autonomously executing hypothesis-driven loops ; and (iii) autonomous discovery, independently exploring open problems.

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