6 research outputs found

    ESTIMATION AND CONTROL OF NONLINEAR SYSTEMS: MODEL-BASED AND MODEL-FREE APPROACHES

    Get PDF
    State estimation and subsequent controller design for a general nonlinear system is an important problem that have been studied over the past decades. Many applications, e.g., atmospheric and oceanic sampling or lift control of an airfoil, display strongly nonlinear dynamics with very high dimensionality. Some of these applications use smaller underwater or aerial sensing platforms with insufficient on-board computation power to use a Monte-Carlo approach of particle filters. Hence, they need a computationally efficient filtering method for state-estimation without a severe penalty on the performance. On the other hand, the difficulty of obtaining a reliable model of the underlying system, e.g., a high-dimensional fluid dynamical environment or vehicle flow in a complex traffic network, calls for the design of a data-driven estimation and controller when abundant measurements are present from a variety of sensors. This dissertation places these problems in two broad categories: model-based and model-free estimation and output feedback. In the first part of the dissertation, a semi-parametric method with Gaussian mixture model (GMM) is used to approximate the unknown density of states. Then a Kalman filter and its nonlinear variants are employed to propagate and update each Gaussian mode with a Bayesian update rule. The linear observation model permits a Kalman filter covariance update for each Gaussian mode. The estimation error is shown to be stochastically bounded and this is illustrated numerically. The estimate is used in an observer-based feedback control to stabilize a general closed-loop system. A transferoperator- based approach is then proposed for the motion update for Bayesian filtering of a nonlinear system. A finite-dimensional approximation of the Perron-Frobenius (PF) operator yields a method called constrained Ulam dynamic mode decomposition (CUDMD). This algorithm is applied for output feedback of a pitching airfoil in unsteady flow. For the second part, an echo-state network (ESN) based approach equipped with an ensemble Kalman filter is proposed for data-driven estimation of a nonlinear system from a time series. A random reservoir of recurrent neural connections with the echo-state property (ESP) is trained from a time-series data. It is then used as a model-predictor for an ensemble Kalman filter for sparse estimation. The proposed data-driven estimation method is applied to predict the traffic flow from a set of mobility data of the UMD campus. A data-driven model-identification and controller design is also developed for control-affine nonlinear systems that are ubiquitous in several aerospace applications. We seek to find an approximate linear/bilinear representation of these nonlinear systems from data using the extended dynamic mode decomposition algorithm (EDMD) and apply Liealgebraic methods to analyze the controllability and design a controller. The proposed method utilizes the Koopman canonical transform (KCT) to approximate the dynamics into a bilinear system (Koopman bilinear form) under certain assumptions. The accuracy of this approximation is then analytically justified with the universal approximation property of the Koopman eigenfunctions. The resulting bilinear system is then subjected to controllability analysis using the Myhill semigroup and Lie algebraic structures, and a fixed endpoint optimal controller is designed using the Pontryagin’s principle

    MS FT-2-2 7 Orthogonal polynomials and quadrature: Theory, computation, and applications

    Get PDF
    Quadrature rules find many applications in science and engineering. Their analysis is a classical area of applied mathematics and continues to attract considerable attention. This seminar brings together speakers with expertise in a large variety of quadrature rules. It is the aim of the seminar to provide an overview of recent developments in the analysis of quadrature rules. The computation of error estimates and novel applications also are described

    Mathematical Economics

    Get PDF
    This book is devoted to the application of fractional calculus in economics to describe processes with memory and non-locality. Fractional calculus is a branch of mathematics that studies the properties of differential and integral operators that are characterized by real or complex orders. Fractional calculus methods are powerful tools for describing the processes and systems with memory and nonlocality. Recently, fractional integro-differential equations have been used to describe a wide class of economical processes with power law memory and spatial nonlocality. Generalizations of basic economic concepts and notions the economic processes with memory were proposed. New mathematical models with continuous time are proposed to describe economic dynamics with long memory. This book is a collection of articles reflecting the latest mathematical and conceptual developments in mathematical economics with memory and non-locality based on applications of fractional calculus
    corecore