56 research outputs found

    Efficient model-free Q-factor approximation in value space via log-sum-exp neural networks

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    We propose an efficient technique for performing data-driven optimal control of discrete-time systems. In particular, we show that log-sum-exp (lselse) neural networks, which are smooth and convex universal approximators of convex functions, can be efficiently used to approximate Q-factors arising from finite-horizon optimal control problems with continuous state space. The key advantage of these networks over classical approximation techniques is that they are convex and hence readily amenable to efficient optimization

    A Variation on a Random Coordinate Minimization Method for Constrained Polynomial Optimization

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    In this paper, an algorithm is proposed for solving constrained and unconstrained polynomial minimization problems. The algorithm is a variation on random coordinate descent, in which transverse steps are seldom taken. Differently from other methods available in the literature, the proposed technique is guaranteed to converge in probability to the global solution of the minimization problem, even when the objective polynomial is nonconvex. The theoretical results are corroborated by a complexity analysis and by numerical tests that validate its efficiency

    Collision-avoiding decentralized control for vehicle platoons: a mechanical perspective

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    A new bidirectional decentralized control algorithm for vehicle platoons is proposed, which guarantees absence of collisions between the vehicles. The algorithm exploits an elegant parallel between vehicles platoon and chains of interconnected mass-spring-damper systems and the idea of barrier certificates. Stability and robustness properties of the algorithm are examined. The results are illustrated by numerical examples, simulating different driving scenarios

    Online supervised global path planning for AMRs with human-obstacle avoidance

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    In smart factories, the performance of the production lines is improved thanks to the wide application of mobile robots. In workspaces where human operators and mobile robots coexist, safety is a fundamental factor to be considered. In this context, the motion planning of Autonomous Mobile Robots is a challenging task, since it must take into account the human factor. In this paper, an implementation of a three-level online path planning is proposed, in which a set of waypoints belonging to a safe path is computed by a supervisory planner. Depending on the nature of the detected obstacles during the robot motion, the re-computation of the safe path may be enabled, after the collision avoidance action provided by the local planner is initiated. Particular attention is devoted to the detection and avoidance of human operators. The supervisory planner is triggered as the detected human gets sufficiently close to the mobile robot, allowing it to follow a new safe virtual path while conservatively circumnavigating the operator. The proposed algorithm has been experimentally validated in a laboratory environment emulating industrial scenarios

    Design of local observers for autonomous nonlinear systems not in observability canonical form

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    International audienceThe main objective of this paper is to propose a framework for the design of local asymptotic observers, with arbitrarily fast rate of convergence, for autonomous nonlinear systems that are not in observability canonical form. The proposed methodology does not require the knowledge of the inverse of the observability map. Such a goal is pursued by coupling a high-gain observer with a system that is able to locally dynamically invert the observability map

    L2-Gain for hybrid linear systems with periodic jumps: A game theoretic approach for analysis and design

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    In this paper, the disturbance attenuation problem is formulated and solved for a class of linear hybrid systems in the presence of periodic jumps. The results are achieved, both in the finite and infinite horizon cases, by borrowing ideas from the theory of dynamic games. In the considered formulation, independent disturbances affecting the continuous-time and the discrete-time components of the hybrid system are allowed. Moreover, the analysis is carried out by introducing easily verifiable conditions, involving the definition of a Monodromy Riccati Equation , i.e., a classical Riccati equation defined for the one-period discrete-time equivalent model. Interestingly, as a by-product, the main statements essentially characterize the solution of zero-sum noncooperative dynamic games for periodic linear hybrid systems, which is of interest per se

    A mathematical framework for modeling propagation of infectious diseases with mobile individuals

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