303 research outputs found

    Coordination of passive systems under quantized measurements

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    In this paper we investigate a passivity approach to collective coordination and synchronization problems in the presence of quantized measurements and show that coordination tasks can be achieved in a practical sense for a large class of passive systems.Comment: 40 pages, 1 figure, submitted to journal, second round of revie

    Designing Fully Distributed Consensus Protocols for Linear Multi-agent Systems with Directed Graphs

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    This paper addresses the distributed consensus protocol design problem for multi-agent systems with general linear dynamics and directed communication graphs. Existing works usually design consensus protocols using the smallest real part of the nonzero eigenvalues of the Laplacian matrix associated with the communication graph, which however is global information. In this paper, based on only the agent dynamics and the relative states of neighboring agents, a distributed adaptive consensus protocol is designed to achieve leader-follower consensus for any communication graph containing a directed spanning tree with the leader as the root node. The proposed adaptive protocol is independent of any global information of the communication graph and thereby is fully distributed. Extensions to the case with multiple leaders are further studied.Comment: 16 page, 3 figures. To appear in IEEE Transactions on Automatic Contro

    An Overview of Recent Progress in the Study of Distributed Multi-agent Coordination

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    This article reviews some main results and progress in distributed multi-agent coordination, focusing on papers published in major control systems and robotics journals since 2006. Distributed coordination of multiple vehicles, including unmanned aerial vehicles, unmanned ground vehicles and unmanned underwater vehicles, has been a very active research subject studied extensively by the systems and control community. The recent results in this area are categorized into several directions, such as consensus, formation control, optimization, task assignment, and estimation. After the review, a short discussion section is included to summarize the existing research and to propose several promising research directions along with some open problems that are deemed important for further investigations

    Event-Triggered Consensus and Formation Control in Multi-Agent Coordination

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    The focus of this thesis is to study distributed event-triggered control for multi-agent systems (MASs) facing constraints in practical applications. We consider several problems in the field, ranging from event-triggered consensus with information quantization, event-triggered edge agreement under synchronized/unsynchronized clocks, event-triggered leader-follower consensus with Euler-Lagrange agent dynamics and cooperative event-triggered rigid formation control. The first topic is named as event-triggered consensus with quantized relative state measurements. In this topic, we develop two event-triggered controllers with quantized relative state measurements to achieve consensus for an undirected network where each agent is modelled by single integrator dynamics. Both uniform and logarithmic quantizers are considered, which, together with two different controllers, yield four cases of study in this topic. The quantized information is used to update the control input as well as to determine the next trigger event. We show that approximate consensus can be achieved by the proposed algorithms and Zeno behaviour can be completely excluded if constant offsets with some computable lower bounds are added to the trigger conditions. The second topic considers event-triggered edge agreement problems. Two cases, namely the synchronized clock case and the unsynchronized clock case, are studied. In the synchronized clock case, all agents are activated simultaneously to measure the relative state information over edge links under a global clock. Edge events are defined and their occurrences trigger the update of control inputs for the two agents sharing the link. We show that average consensus can be achieved with our proposed algorithm. In the unsynchronized clock case, each agent executes control algorithms under its own clock which is not synchronized with other agents' clocks. An edge event only triggers control input update for an individual agent. It is shown that all agents will reach consensus in a totally asynchronous manner. In the third topic, we propose three different distributed event-triggered control algorithms to achieve leader-follower consensus for a network of Euler-Lagrange agents. We firstly propose two model-independent algorithms for a subclass of Euler-Lagrange agents without the vector of gravitational potential forces. A variable-gain algorithm is employed when the sensing graph is undirected; algorithm parameters are selected in a fully distributed manner with much greater flexibility compared to all previous work concerning event-triggered consensus problems. When the sensing graph is directed, a constant-gain algorithm is employed. The control gains must be centrally designed to exceed several lower bounding inequalities which require limited knowledge of bounds on the matrices describing the agent dynamics, bounds on network topology information and bounds on the initial conditions. When the Euler-Lagrange agents have dynamics which include the vector of gravitational potential forces, an adaptive algorithm is proposed. This requires more information about the agent dynamics but allows for the estimation of uncertain agent parameters. The last topic discusses cooperative stabilization control of rigid formations via an event-triggered approach. We first design a centralized event-triggered formation control system, in which a central event controller determines the next triggering time and broadcasts the event signal to all the agents for control input update. We then build on this approach to propose a distributed event control strategy, in which each agent can use its local event trigger and local information to update the control input at its own event time. For both cases, the trigger condition, event function and trigger behaviour are discussed in detail, and the exponential convergence of the formation system is guaranteed

    Self-triggered Consensus of Multi-agent Systems with Quantized Relative State Measurements

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    This paper addresses the consensus problem of first-order continuous-time multi-agent systems over undirected graphs. Each agent samples relative state measurements in a self-triggered fashion and transmits the sum of the measurements to its neighbors. Moreover, we use finite-level dynamic quantizers and apply the zooming-in technique. The proposed joint design method for quantization and self-triggered sampling achieves asymptotic consensus, and inter-event times are strictly positive. Sampling times are determined explicitly with iterative procedures including the computation of the Lambert WW-function. A simulation example is provided to illustrate the effectiveness of the proposed method.Comment: 29 pages, 3 figures. To appear in IET Control Theory & Application
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