4 research outputs found

    Harmonic synchronization under all three types of coupling: position, velocity, and acceleration

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    Synchronization of identical harmonic oscillators interconnected via position, velocity, and acceleration couplings is studied. How to construct a complex Laplacian matrix representing the overall coupling is presented. It is shown that the oscillators asymptotically synchronize if and only if this matrix has a single eigenvalue on the imaginary axis. This result generalizes some of the known spectral tests for synchronization. Some simpler Laplacian constructions are also proved to work provided that certain structural conditions are satisfied by the coupling graphs.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure

    Coordination of multi-agent systems: stability via nonlinear Perron-Frobenius theory and consensus for desynchronization and dynamic estimation.

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    This thesis addresses a variety of problems that arise in the study of complex networks composed by multiple interacting agents, usually called multi-agent systems (MASs). Each agent is modeled as a dynamical system whose dynamics is fully described by a state-space representation. In the first part the focus is on the application to MASs of recent results that deal with the extensions of Perron-Frobenius theory to nonlinear maps. In the shift from the linear to the nonlinear framework, Perron-Frobenius theory considers maps being order-preserving instead of matrices being nonnegative. The main contribution is threefold. First of all, a convergence analysis of the iterative behavior of two novel classes of order-preserving nonlinear maps is carried out, thus establishing sufficient conditions which guarantee convergence toward a fixed point of the map: nonnegative row-stochastic matrices turns out to be a special case. Secondly, these results are applied to MASs, both in discrete and continuous-time: local properties of the agents' dynamics have been identified so that the global interconnected system falls into one of the above mentioned classes, thus guaranteeing its global stability. Lastly, a sufficient condition on the connectivity of the communication network is provided to restrict the set of equilibrium points of the system to the consensus points, thus ensuring the agents to achieve consensus. These results do not rely on standard tools (e.g., Lyapunov theory) and thus they constitute a novel approach to the analysis and control of multi-agent dynamical systems. In the second part the focus is on the design of dynamic estimation algorithms in large networks which enable to solve specific problems. The first problem consists in breaking synchronization in networks of diffusively coupled harmonic oscillators. The design of a local state feedback that achieves desynchronization in connected networks with arbitrary undirected interactions is provided. The proposed control law is obtained via a novel protocol for the distributed estimation of the Fiedler vector of the Laplacian matrix. The second problem consists in the estimation of the number of active agents in networks wherein agents are allowed to join or leave. The adopted strategy consists in the distributed and dynamic estimation of the maximum among numbers locally generated by the active agents and the subsequent inference of the number of the agents that took part in the experiment. Two protocols are proposed and characterized to solve the consensus problem on the time-varying max value. The third problem consists in the average state estimation of a large network of agents where only a few agents' states are accessible to a centralized observer. The proposed strategy projects the dynamics of the original system into a lower dimensional state space, which is useful when dealing with large-scale systems. Necessary and sufficient conditions for the existence of a linear and a sliding mode observers are derived, along with a characterization of their design and convergence properties

    Bipartite Consensus Control for Coupled Harmonic Oscillators Under a Coopetitive Network Topology

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    Impulse Bipartite Consensus Control for Coupled Harmonic Oscillators Under a Coopetitive Network Topology Using Only Position States

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