1,070 research outputs found
Output-input stability and minimum-phase nonlinear systems
This paper introduces and studies the notion of output-input stability, which
represents a variant of the minimum-phase property for general smooth nonlinear
control systems. The definition of output-input stability does not rely on a
particular choice of coordinates in which the system takes a normal form or on
the computation of zero dynamics. In the spirit of the ``input-to-state
stability'' philosophy, it requires the state and the input of the system to be
bounded by a suitable function of the output and derivatives of the output,
modulo a decaying term depending on initial conditions. The class of
output-input stable systems thus defined includes all affine systems in global
normal form whose internal dynamics are input-to-state stable and also all
left-invertible linear systems whose transmission zeros have negative real
parts. As an application, we explain how the new concept enables one to develop
a natural extension to nonlinear systems of a basic result from linear adaptive
control.Comment: Revised version, to appear in IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control.
See related work in http://www.math.rutgers.edu/~sontag and
http://black.csl.uiuc.edu/~liberzo
Switched Control of Electron Nuclear Spin Systems
In this article, we study control of electron-nuclear spin dynamics at
magnetic field strengths where the Larmor frequency of the nucleus is
comparable to the hyperfine coupling strength. The quantization axis for the
nuclear spin differs from the static B_0 field direction and depends on the
state of the electron spin. The quantization axis can be switched by flipping
the state of electron spin, allowing for universal control on nuclear spin
states. We show that by performing a sequence of flips (each followed by a
suitable delay), we can perform any desired rotation on the nuclear spins,
which can also be conditioned on the state of the electron spin. These
operations, combined with electron spin rotations can be used to synthesize any
unitary transformation on the coupled electron-nuclear spin system. We discuss
how these methods can be used for design of experiments for transfer of
polarization from the electron to the nuclear spins
Passification-based adaptive control with quantized measurements
We propose and analyze passification-based adaptive controller for linear uncertain systems with quantized measurements. Since the effect of the quantization error is similar to the effect of a disturbance, the adaptation law with σ-modification is used. To ensure convergence to a smaller set, the parameters of the adaptation law are being switched during the evolution of the system and a dynamic quantizer is used. It is proved that if the quantization error is small enough then the proposed controller ensures convergence of the state of a hyper-minimum-phase system to an arbitrarily small vicinity of the origin. Applicability of the proposed controller to polytopic-type uncertain systems and its efficiency is demonstrated by the example of yaw angle control of a flying vehicle
Adaptive control of passifiable linear systems with quantized measurements and bounded disturbances
We consider a linear uncertain system with an unknown bounded disturbance under a passification-based adaptive controller with quantized measurements. First, we derive conditions ensuring ultimate boundedness of the system. Then we develop a switching procedure for an adaptive controller with a dynamic quantizer that ensures convergence to a smaller set. The size of the limit set is defined by the disturbance bound. Finally, we demonstrate applicability of the proposed controller to polytopic-type uncertain systems and its efficiency by the example of a yaw angle control of a flying vehicle
Small scale aspects of flows in proximity of the turbulent/non-turbulent interface
The work reported below is a first of its kind study of the properties of
turbulent flow without strong mean shear in a Newtonian fluid in proximity of
the turbulent/non-turbulent interface, with emphasis on the small scale
aspects. The main tools used are a three-dimensional particle tracking system
(3D-PTV) allowing to measure and follow in a Lagrangian manner the field of
velocity derivatives and direct numerical simulations (DNS). The comparison of
flow properties in the turbulent (A), intermediate (B) and non-turbulent (C)
regions in the proximity of the interface allows for direct observation of the
key physical processes underlying the entrainment phenomenon. The differences
between small scale strain and enstrophy are striking and point to the definite
scenario of turbulent entrainment via the viscous forces originating in strain.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, Phys. Fluid
Alterations of Structures and Functions of Useful Proteins : Cholesterol Oxidase and Human Metallothionein
This paper overviews a series of the authors’ recent contributions to dynamic quantizer design for control. The problem considered here is to find a dynamic quantizer such that the resulting quantized system is an optimal approximation of an ideal unquantized system.We show here a fundamental solution to this problem and briefly review several results toward real applications
Stability of quantized time-delay nonlinear systems: A Lyapunov-Krasowskii-functional approach
Lyapunov-Krasowskii functionals are used to design quantized control laws for
nonlinear continuous-time systems in the presence of constant delays in the
input. The quantized control law is implemented via hysteresis to prevent
chattering. Under appropriate conditions, our analysis applies to stabilizable
nonlinear systems for any value of the quantization density. The resulting
quantized feedback is parametrized with respect to the quantization density.
Moreover, the maximal allowable delay tolerated by the system is characterized
as a function of the quantization density.Comment: 31 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Mathematics of Control, Signals,
and System
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