Linear Multivariable Control is for graduate students specializing in control, engineering scientists engaged in control systems research and development, and mathematicians with some previous acquaintance with control problems. It presents a unified approach to the structural synthesis of m
Linear Multivariable Control: A Geometric Approach
β Scribed by W. Murray Wonham (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag New York
- Year
- 1985
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 348
- Series
- Applications of Mathematics 10
- Edition
- 3
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
In wntmg this monograph my aim has been to present a "geometric" approach to the structural synthesis of multivariable control systems that are linear, time-invariant and of finite dynamic order. The book is adΒ dressed to graduate students specializing in control, to engineering scientists involved in control systems research and development, and to mathematiΒ cians interested in systems control theory. The label "geometric" in the title is applied for several reasons. First and obviously, the setting is linear state space and the mathematics chiefly linear algebra in abstract (geometric) style. The basic ideas are the familiar system concepts of controllability and observability, thought of as geometric propΒ erties of distinguished state subspaces. Indeed, the geometry was first brought in out of revulsion against the orgy of matrix manipulation which linear control theory mainly consisted of, around fifteen years ago. But secondly and of greater interest, the geometric setting rather quickly sugΒ gested new methods of attacking synthesis which have proved to be intuitive and economical; they are also easily reduced to matrix arithmetic as soon as you want to compute. The essence of the "geometric" approach is just this: instead of looking directly for a feedback law (say u = Fx) which would solve your synthesis problem if a solution exists, first characterize solvability as a verifiable property of some constructible state subspace, say Y. Then, if all is well, you may calculate F from Y quite easily.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xvi
Mathematical Preliminaries....Pages 1-35
Introduction to Controllability....Pages 36-47
Controllability, Feedback and Pole Assignment....Pages 48-56
Observability and Dynamic Observers....Pages 57-85
Disturbance Decoupling and Output Stabilization....Pages 86-102
Controllability Subspaces....Pages 103-130
Tracking and Regulation I: Output Regulation....Pages 131-150
Tracking and Regulation II: Output Regulation with Internal Stability....Pages 151-183
Tracking and Regulation III: Structurally Stable Synthesis....Pages 184-220
Noninteracting Control I: Basic Principles....Pages 221-239
Noninteracting Control II: Efficient Compensation....Pages 240-262
Noninteracting Control III: Generic Solvability....Pages 263-275
Quadratic Optimization I: Existence and Uniqueness....Pages 276-289
Quadratic Optimization II: Dynamic Response....Pages 290-310
Back Matter....Pages 311-334
β¦ Subjects
Systems Theory, Control; Calculus of Variations and Optimal Control; Optimization
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Automatic feedback control systems play crucial roles in many fields, including manufacturing industries, communications, naval and space systems. At its simplest, a control system represents a feedback loop in which the difference between the ideal (input) and actual (output) signals is used to mod
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