332 research outputs found
Consensus Tracking for Multiagent Systems Under Bounded Unknown External Disturbances Using Sliding-PID Control
This paper is devoted to the study of consensus tracking for multiagent systems under unknown but bounded external disturbances. A consensus tracking protocol which is a combination between the conventional PID controller and sliding mode controller named sliding-PID protocol is proposed. The protocol is applied to the consensus tracking of multiagent system under bounded external disturbances where results showed high effectiveness and robustness
Distributed Event-triggered Fault-tolerant Consensus Control of Multi-agent Systems under DoS Attacks
This study investigates the distributed fault-tolerant consensus issue of multi-agent systems subject to complicated abrupt and incipient time-varying actuator faults in physical hierarchy and aperiodic denial-of-service (DoS) attacks in networked hierarchy. Decentralized estimators are devised to estimate consecutive system states and actuator faults. A unified framework with an absolute local output-based closed-loop estimator in decentralized fault estimation design and a relative broadcasting state-based open-loop estimator in distributed event-triggered fault-tolerant consensus design is developed. Criteria of exponential consensus of the faulty multi-agent systems under DoS attacks are derived by virtue of average dwelling time and attack frequency technique. Simulations are outlined to confirm the efficacy of the proposed distributed fault-tolerant consensus control algorithm based on an event-triggered mechanism
Synchronization of multiple rigid body systems: a survey
The multi-agent system has been a hot topic in the past few decades owing to
its lower cost, higher robustness, and higher flexibility. As a particular
multi-agent system, the multiple rigid body system received a growing interest
since its wide applications in transportation, aerospace, and ocean
exploration. Due to the non-Euclidean configuration space of attitudes and the
inherent nonlinearity of the dynamics of rigid body systems, synchronization of
multiple rigid body systems is quite challenging. This paper aims to present an
overview of the recent progress in synchronization of multiple rigid body
systems from the view of two fundamental problems. The first problem focuses on
attitude synchronization, while the second one focuses on cooperative motion
control in that rotation and translation dynamics are coupled. Finally, a
summary and future directions are given in the conclusion
On leaderless consensus of fractional-order nonlinear multi-agent systems via event-triggered control
The consensus problem of fractional-order multi-agent systems is investigated by eventtriggered control in this paper. Based on the graph theory and the Lyapunov functional approach, the conditions for guaranteeing the consensus are derived. Then, according to some basic theories of fractional-order differential equation and some properties of Mittag–Leffler function, the Zeno behavior could be excluded. Finally, a simulation example is given to check the effectiveness of the theoretical result
Event-Triggered Distributed Data-Driven Iterative Learning Bipartite Formation Control for Unknown Nonlinear Multiagent Systems
In this study, we investigate the event-triggering time-varying trajectory bipartite formation tracking problem for a class of unknown nonaffine nonlinear discrete-time multiagent systems (MASs). We first obtain an equivalent linear data model with a dynamic parameter of each agent by employing the pseudo-partial-derivative technique. Then, we propose an event-triggered distributed model-free adaptive iterative learning bipartite formation control scheme by using the input/output data of MASs without employing either the plant structure or any knowledge of the dynamics. To improve the flexibility and network communication resource utilization, we construct an observer-based event-triggering mechanism with a dead-zone operator. Furthermore, we rigorously prove the convergence of the proposed algorithm, where each agent’s time-varying trajectory bipartite formation tracking error is reduced to a small range around zero. Finally, four simulation studies further validate the designed control approach’s effectiveness, demonstrating that the proposed scheme is also suitable for the homogeneous MASs to achieve time-varying trajectory bipartite formation tracking
Data-Driven Architecture to Increase Resilience In Multi-Agent Coordinated Missions
The rise in the use of Multi-Agent Systems (MASs) in unpredictable and changing environments has created the need for intelligent algorithms to increase their autonomy, safety and performance in the event of disturbances and threats. MASs are attractive for their flexibility, which also makes them prone to threats that may result from hardware failures (actuators, sensors, onboard computer, power source) and operational abnormal conditions (weather, GPS denied location, cyber-attacks). This dissertation presents research on a bio-inspired approach for resilience augmentation in MASs in the presence of disturbances and threats such as communication link and stealthy zero-dynamics attacks. An adaptive bio-inspired architecture is developed for distributed consensus algorithms to increase fault-tolerance in a network of multiple high-order nonlinear systems under directed fixed topologies. In similarity with the natural organisms’ ability to recognize and remember specific pathogens to generate its immunity, the immunity-based architecture consists of a Distributed Model-Reference Adaptive Control (DMRAC) with an Artificial Immune System (AIS) adaptation law integrated within a consensus protocol. Feedback linearization is used to modify the high-order nonlinear model into four decoupled linear subsystems. A stability proof of the adaptation law is conducted using Lyapunov methods and Jordan decomposition. The DMRAC is proven to be stable in the presence of external time-varying bounded disturbances and the tracking error trajectories are shown to be bounded. The effectiveness of the proposed architecture is examined through numerical simulations. The proposed controller successfully ensures that consensus is achieved among all agents while the adaptive law v simultaneously rejects the disturbances in the agent and its neighbors. The architecture also includes a health management system to detect faulty agents within the global network. Further numerical simulations successfully test and show that the Global Health Monitoring (GHM) does effectively detect faults within the network
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