Lecture Notes on Control System Theory and Design

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Publicat a:arXiv.org (Jul 11, 2024), p. n/a
Autor principal: Basar, Tamer
Altres autors: Meyn, Sean, Perkins, William R
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Cornell University Library, arXiv.org
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Accés en línia:Citation/Abstract
Full text outside of ProQuest
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022 |a 2331-8422 
035 |a 2420333089 
045 0 |b d20240711 
100 1 |a Basar, Tamer 
245 1 |a Lecture Notes on Control System Theory and Design 
260 |b Cornell University Library, arXiv.org  |c Jul 11, 2024 
513 |a Working Paper 
520 3 |a This is a collection of the lecture notes of the three authors for a first-year graduate course on control system theory and design (ECE 515 , formerly ECE 415) at the ECE Department of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. This is a fundamental course on the modern theory of dynamical systems and their control, and builds on a first-level course in control that emphasizes frequency-domain methods (such as the course ECE 486 , formerly ECE 386, at UIUC ). The emphasis in this graduate course is on state space techniques, and it encompasses modeling , analysis (of structural properties of systems, such as stability, controllability, and observability), synthesis (of observers/compensators and controllers) subject to design specifications, and optimization . Accordingly, this set of lecture notes is organized in four parts, with each part dealing with one of the issues identified above. Concentration is on linear systems , with nonlinear systems covered only in some specific contexts, such as stability and dynamic optimization. Both continuous-time and discrete-time systems are covered, with the former, however, in much greater depth than the latter. The main objective of this course is to teach the student some fundamental principles within a solid conceptual framework, that will enable her/him to design feedback loops compatible with the information available on the "states" of the system to be controlled, and by taking into account considerations such as stability, performance, energy conservation, and even robustness. A second objective is to familiarize her/him with the available modern computational, simulation, and general software tools that facilitate the design of effective feedback loops 
653 |a Control theory 
653 |a Control systems design 
653 |a Compensators 
653 |a Systems theory 
653 |a Dynamic stability 
653 |a Feedback loops 
653 |a Linear systems 
653 |a Design specifications 
653 |a Controllability 
653 |a Stability analysis 
653 |a Discrete time systems 
653 |a Control stability 
653 |a Nonlinear systems 
653 |a Observability (systems) 
653 |a Control methods 
653 |a Design optimization 
653 |a Software 
653 |a Computer simulation 
653 |a Energy conservation 
653 |a System theory 
653 |a Software development tools 
700 1 |a Meyn, Sean 
700 1 |a Perkins, William R 
773 0 |t arXiv.org  |g (Jul 11, 2024), p. n/a 
786 0 |d ProQuest  |t Engineering Database 
856 4 1 |3 Citation/Abstract  |u https://www.proquest.com/docview/2420333089/abstract/embedded/L8HZQI7Z43R0LA5T?source=fedsrch 
856 4 0 |3 Full text outside of ProQuest  |u http://arxiv.org/abs/2007.01367