1,035 research outputs found

    Advances in Spacecraft Systems and Orbit Determination

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    "Advances in Spacecraft Systems and Orbit Determinations", discusses the development of new technologies and the limitations of the present technology, used for interplanetary missions. Various experts have contributed to develop the bridge between present limitations and technology growth to overcome the limitations. Key features of this book inform us about the orbit determination techniques based on a smooth research based on astrophysics. The book also provides a detailed overview on Spacecraft Systems including reliability of low-cost AOCS, sliding mode controlling and a new view on attitude controller design based on sliding mode, with thrusters. It also provides a technological roadmap for HVAC optimization. The book also gives an excellent overview of resolving the difficulties for interplanetary missions with the comparison of present technologies and new advancements. Overall, this will be very much interesting book to explore the roadmap of technological growth in spacecraft systems

    Nonlinear Systems

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    Open Mathematics is a challenging notion for theoretical modeling, technical analysis, and numerical simulation in physics and mathematics, as well as in many other fields, as highly correlated nonlinear phenomena, evolving over a large range of time scales and length scales, control the underlying systems and processes in their spatiotemporal evolution. Indeed, available data, be they physical, biological, or financial, and technologically complex systems and stochastic systems, such as mechanical or electronic devices, can be managed from the same conceptual approach, both analytically and through computer simulation, using effective nonlinear dynamics methods. The aim of this Special Issue is to highlight papers that show the dynamics, control, optimization and applications of nonlinear systems. This has recently become an increasingly popular subject, with impressive growth concerning applications in engineering, economics, biology, and medicine, and can be considered a veritable contribution to the literature. Original papers relating to the objective presented above are especially welcome subjects. Potential topics include, but are not limited to: Stability analysis of discrete and continuous dynamical systems; Nonlinear dynamics in biological complex systems; Stability and stabilization of stochastic systems; Mathematical models in statistics and probability; Synchronization of oscillators and chaotic systems; Optimization methods of complex systems; Reliability modeling and system optimization; Computation and control over networked systems

    High Accuracy Nonlinear Control and Estimation for Machine Tool Systems

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    Resilience-oriented control and communication framework for cyber-physical microgrids

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    Climate change drives the energy supply transition from traditional fossil fuel-based power generation to renewable energy resources. This transition has been widely recognised as one of the most significant developing pathways promoting the decarbonisation process toward a zero-carbon and sustainable society. Rapidly developing renewables gradually dominate energy systems and promote the current energy supply system towards decentralisation and digitisation. The manifestation of decentralisation is at massive dispatchable energy resources, while the digitisation features strong cohesion and coherence between electrical power technologies and information and communication technologies (ICT). Massive dispatchable physical devices and cyber components are interdependent and coupled tightly as a cyber-physical energy supply system, while this cyber-physical energy supply system currently faces an increase of extreme weather (e.g., earthquake, flooding) and cyber-contingencies (e.g., cyberattacks) in the frequency, intensity, and duration. Hence, one major challenge is to find an appropriate cyber-physical solution to accommodate increasing renewables while enhancing power supply resilience. The main focus of this thesis is to blend centralised and decentralised frameworks to propose a collaboratively centralised-and-decentralised resilient control framework for energy systems i.e., networked microgrids (MGs) that can operate optimally in the normal condition while can mitigate simultaneous cyber-physical contingencies in the extreme condition. To achieve this, we investigate the concept of "cyber-physical resilience" including four phases, namely prevention/upgrade, resistance, adaption/mitigation, and recovery. Throughout these stages, we tackle different cyber-physical challenges under the concept of microgrid ranging from a centralised-to-decentralised transitional control framework coping with cyber-physical out of service, a cyber-resilient distributed control methodology for networked MGs, a UAV assisted post-contingency cyber-physical service restoration, to a fast-convergent distributed dynamic state estimation algorithm for a class of interconnected systems.Open Acces

    Contraction analysis of switched systems with application to control and observer design

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    In many control problems, such as tracking and regulation, observer design, coordination and synchronization, it is more natural to describe the stability problem in terms of the asymptotic convergence of trajectories with respect to one another, a property known as incremental stability. Contraction analysis exploits the stability properties of the linearized dynamics to infer incremental stability properties of nonlinear systems. However, results available in the literature do not fully encompass the case of switched dynamical systems. To overcome these limitations, in this thesis we present a novel extension of contraction analysis to such systems based on matrix measures and differential Lyapunov functions. The analysis is conducted first regularizing the system, i.e. approximating it with a smooth dynamical system, and then applying standard contraction results. Based on our new conditions, we present design procedures to synthesize switching control inputs to incrementally stabilize a class of smooth nonlinear systems, and to design state observers for a large class of nonlinear switched systems including those exhibiting sliding motion. In addition, as further work, we present new conditions for the onset of synchronization and consensus patterns in complex networks. Specifically, we show that if network nodes exhibit some symmetry and if the network topology is properly balanced by an appropriate designed communication protocol, then symmetry of the nodes can be exploited to achieve a synchronization/consensus pattern

    State-of-the-art in aerodynamic shape optimisation methods

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    Aerodynamic optimisation has become an indispensable component for any aerodynamic design over the past 60 years, with applications to aircraft, cars, trains, bridges, wind turbines, internal pipe flows, and cavities, among others, and is thus relevant in many facets of technology. With advancements in computational power, automated design optimisation procedures have become more competent, however, there is an ambiguity and bias throughout the literature with regards to relative performance of optimisation architectures and employed algorithms. This paper provides a well-balanced critical review of the dominant optimisation approaches that have been integrated with aerodynamic theory for the purpose of shape optimisation. A total of 229 papers, published in more than 120 journals and conference proceedings, have been classified into 6 different optimisation algorithm approaches. The material cited includes some of the most well-established authors and publications in the field of aerodynamic optimisation. This paper aims to eliminate bias toward certain algorithms by analysing the limitations, drawbacks, and the benefits of the most utilised optimisation approaches. This review provides comprehensive but straightforward insight for non-specialists and reference detailing the current state for specialist practitioners

    Dynamic Modeling, Design and Control of Wire-Borne Underactuated Brachiating Robots: Theory and Application

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    The ability of mobile robots to locomote safely in unstructured environments will be a cornerstone of robotics of the future. Introducing robots into fully unstructured environments is known to be a notoriously difficult problem in the robotics field. As a result, many of today's mobile robots are confined to prepared level surfaces in laboratory settings or relatively controlled environments only. One avenue for deploying mobile robots into unstructured settings is to utilize elevated wire networks. The research conducted under this thesis lays the groundwork for developing a new class of wire-borne underactuated robots that employs brachiation -- swinging like an ape -- as a means of locomotion on flexible cables. Executing safe brachiation maneuvers with a cable-suspended underactuated robot is a challenging problem due to the complications induced by the cable dynamics and vibrations. This thesis studies, from concept through experiments, the dynamic modeling techniques and control algorithms for wire-borne underactuated brachiating robots, to develop advanced locomotion strategies that enable the robots to perform energy-efficient and robust brachiation motions on flexible cables. High-fidelity and approximate dynamic models are derived for the robot-cable system, which provide the ability to model the interactions between the cable and the robot and to include the flexible cable dynamics in the control design. An optimal trajectory generation framework is presented in which the flexible cable dynamics are explicitly accounted for when designing the optimal swing trajectories. By employing a variety of control-theoretic methods such as robust and adaptive estimation, control Lyapunov and barrier functions, semidefinite programming and sum-of-squares optimization, a set of closed-loop control algorithms are proposed. A novel hardware brachiating robot design and embodiment are presented, which incorporate unique mechanical design features and provide a reliable testbed for experimental validation of the wire-borne underactuated brachiating robots. Extensive simulation results and hardware experiments demonstrate that the proposed multi-body dynamic models, trajectory optimization frameworks, and feedback control algorithms prove highly useful in real world settings and achieve reliable brachiation performance in the presence of uncertainties, disturbances, actuator limits and safety constraints.Ph.D
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