5 research outputs found

    On leaderless consensus of fractional-order nonlinear multi-agent systems via event-triggered control

    Get PDF
    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

    Iterative learning control for multi-agent systems with impulsive consensus tracking

    Get PDF
    In this paper, we adopt D-type and PD-type learning laws with the initial state of iteration to achieve uniform tracking problem of multi-agent systems subjected to impulsive input. For the multi-agent system with impulse, we show that all agents are driven to achieve a given asymptotical consensus as the iteration number increases via the proposed learning laws if the virtual leader has a path to any follower agent. Finally, an example is illustrated to verify the effectiveness by tracking a continuous or piecewise continuous desired trajectory

    Enclosing a moving target with an optimally rotated and scaled multiagent pattern

    Get PDF
    We propose a novel control method to enclose a moving target in a two-dimensional setting with a team of agents forming a prescribed geometric pattern. The approach optimises a measure of the overall agent motion costs, via the minimisation of a suitably defined cost function encapsulating the pattern rotation and scaling. We propose two control laws which use global information and make the agents exponentially converge to the prescribed formation with an optimal scale that remains constant, while the team's centroid tracks the target. One control law results in a multiagent pattern that keeps a constant orientation in the workspace; for the other, the pattern rotates with constant speed. These behaviours, whose optimality and steadiness are very relevant for the task addressed, occur independently from the target's velocity. Moreover, the methodology does not require distance measurements, common coordinate references, or communications. We also present formal guarantees of collision avoidance for the proposed approach. Illustrative simulation examples are provided

    Observer-Based Consensus Tracking of Nonlinear Agents in Hybrid Varying Directed Topology

    No full text
    corecore