8,608 research outputs found
Convergence of discrete time Kalman filter estimate to continuous time estimate
This article is concerned with the convergence of the state estimate obtained
from the discrete time Kalman filter to the continuous time estimate as the
temporal discretization is refined. We derive convergence rate estimates for
different systems, first finite dimensional and then infinite dimensional with
bounded or unbounded observation operators. Finally, we derive the convergence
rate in the case where the system dynamics is governed by an analytic
semigroup. The proofs are based on applying the discrete time Kalman filter on
a dense numerable subset of a certain time interval .Comment: Author's version of the manuscript accepted for publication in
International Journal of Contro
Output error minimizing back and forth nudging method for initial state recovery
We show that for linear dynamical systems with skew-adjoint generators, the
initial state estimate given by the back and forth nudging method with
colocated feedback, converges to the minimizer of the discrepancy between the
measured and simulated outputs - given that the observer gains are chosen
suitably and the system is exactly observable. If the system's generator A is
essentially skew-adjoint and dissipative (with not too much dissipation), the
colocated feedback has to be corrected by the operator e^{At}e^{A*t} in order
to obtain such convergence. In some special cases, a feasible approximation for
this operator can be found analytically. The case with wave equation with
constant dissipation will be demonstrated.Comment: This is the preprint version of the article. The final, published
version is available on the journal's websit
Sense and Substance in Wittgenstein"s Tractatus
In the early pages of his Tractatus, Wittgenstein says that
the substance of the world consists of unalterable, simple
objects (Gegenstände) (2.021, 2.027). Substance is connected
to the Sinn of a proposition in the following cryptic
way:
"If the world had no substance, then whether a proposition
had sense [Sinn] would depend on whether another
proposition was true.� (2.0211)�
"In that case we could not sketch any picture of the
world (true or false).� (2.0212)
How can the sense of a proposition depend on the existence
of simple, unalterable objects? No connection between
Sinn and substance is evident on the basis of these
short remarks. Furthermore, the remarks sound strange
because elsewhere in the Tractatus Wittgenstein makes it
clear that we can understand the sense of a proposition
without knowing anything about how things actually stand
in the world (see e.g. 4.024)
- …