8,786 research outputs found
Decomposition of Differential Games
This paper provides a decomposition technique for the purpose of simplifying
the solution of certain zero-sum differential games. The games considered
terminate when the state reaches a target, which can be expressed as the union
of a collection of target subsets; the decomposition consists of replacing the
original target by each of the target subsets. The value of the original game
is then obtained as the lower envelope of the values of the collection of games
resulting from the decomposition, which can be much easier to solve than the
original game. Criteria are given for the validity of the decomposition. The
paper includes examples, illustrating the application of the technique to
pursuit/evasion games, where the decomposition arises from considering the
interaction of individual pursuer/evader pairs.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
A decomposition technique for pursuit evasion games with many pursuers
Here we present a decomposition technique for a class of differential games.
The technique consists in a decomposition of the target set which produces, for
geometrical reasons, a decomposition in the dimensionality of the problem.
Using some elements of Hamilton-Jacobi equations theory, we find a relation
between the regularity of the solution and the possibility to decompose the
problem. We use this technique to solve a pursuit evasion game with multiple
agents
Different transport regimes in a spatially-extended recirculating background
Passive scalar transport in a spatially-extended background of roll
convection is considered in the time-periodic regime. The latter arises due to
the even oscillatory instability of the cell lateral boundary, here accounted
for by sinusoidal oscillations of frequency . By varying the latter
parameter, the strength of anticorrelated regions of the velocity field can be
controled and the conditions under which either an enhancement or a reduction
of transport takes place can be created. Such two ubiquitous regimes are
triggered by a small-scale(random) velocity field superimposed to the
recirculating background. The crucial point is played by the dependence of
Lagrangian trajectories on the statistical properties of the small-scale
velocity field, e.g. its correlation time or its energy.Comment: 9 pages Latex; 5 figure
A discrete Hughes' model for pedestrian flow on graphs
In this paper, we introduce a discrete time-finite state model for pedestrian
flow on a graph in the spirit of the Hughes dynamic continuum model. The
pedestrians, represented by a density function, move on the graph choosing a
route to minimize the instantaneous travel cost to the destination. The density
is governed by a conservation law while the minimization principle is described
by a graph eikonal equation. We show that the model is well posed and we
implement some numerical examples to demonstrate the validity of the proposed
model
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