This textbook mirrors the standard college course in scope and sequence to help students understand basic concepts and to offer extra practice on topics such as differential equations and linear systems, transfer functions, block diagram algebra and transfer functions of systems, signal flow, and mo
Feedback Control Systems
β Scribed by John Van De Vegte
- Publisher
- Prentice Hall
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 238
- Edition
- 3rd Revised ed.
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
A compact exploration of the behavior of dynamic systems and how this behaviour may be changed by the use of feedback. explains concepts in the simplest possible mathematical framework and develops concepts of design in parallel with those of analysis. includes extensive coverage of modeling of physical systems. features two chapters on state space analysis and design. provides two chapters on digital computer control. expands coverage of the classical root locus and frequency response design techniques, provides stepwise procedures for each, with examples for each case, treats phase-lag, phase-lead, and PID control design in separate sections provides an expanded and formalized treatment of block diagram reduction, following the derivation of such diagrams for physical systems, and a discussion of signal flow graphs and Masons Gain Formula. introduces the s-plane in Chapter 1, permitting early coverage of transient response calculation. discusses controller tuning. *provides introductory-level coverage of advanced topics such as multivariable (ch. 13) and nonlinear controls (ch. 14)
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Like engineering systems, biological systems must also operate effectively in the presence of internal and external uncertaintyβsuch as genetic mutations or temperature changes, for example. It is not surprising, then, that evolution has resulted in the widespread use of feedback, and research in sy
Like engineering systems, biological systems must also operate effectively in the presence of internal and external uncertaintyβsuch as genetic mutations or temperature changes, for example. It is not surprising, then, that evolution has resulted in the widespread use of feedback, and research in sy