Control Theory from the Geometric Viewpoint

This document was uploaded by one of our users. The uploader already confirmed that they had the permission to publish it. If you are author/publisher or own the copyright of this documents, please report to us by using this DMCA report form.

Simply click on the Download Book button.

Yes, Book downloads on Ebookily are 100% Free.

Sometimes the book is free on Amazon As well, so go ahead and hit "Search on Amazon"

This book presents some facts and methods of the Mathematical Control Theory treated from the geometric point of view. The book is mainly based on graduate courses given by the first coauthor in the years 2000-2001 at the International School for Advanced Studies, Trieste, Italy. Mathematical prerequisites are reduced to standard courses of Analysis and Linear Algebra plus some basic Real and Functional Analysis. No preliminary knowledge of Control Theory or Differential Geometry is required. What this book is about? The classical deterministic physical world is described by smooth dynamical systems: the future in such a system is com pletely determined by the initial conditions. Moreover, the near future changes smoothly with the initial data. If we leave room for "free will" in this fatalistic world, then we come to control systems. We do so by allowing certain param eters of the dynamical system to change freely at every instant of time. That is what we routinely do in real life with our body, car, cooker, as well as with aircraft, technological processes etc. We try to control all these dynamical systems! Smooth dynamical systems are governed by differential equations. In this book we deal only with finite dimensional systems: they are governed by ordi nary differential equations on finite dimensional smooth manifolds. A control system for us is thus a family of ordinary differential equations. The family is parametrized by control parameters.

Author(s): Andrei A. Agrachev; Yuri Sachkov
Publisher: Springer
Year: 2010

Language: English
Commentary: This one has OCR.
Pages: 415
Tags: Geometric Control Theory

Cover
Preface
Contents
1 - Vector Fields and Control Systems on Smooth Manifolds
2 - Elements of Chronological Calculus
3 - Linear Systems
4 - State Linearizability of Nonlinear Systems
5 - The Orbit Theorem and its Applications
6 - Rotations of the Rigid Body
7 - Control of Configurations
8 - Attainable Sets
9 - Feedbakc and State Equivalence of Control Systems
10 - Optimal Control Problem
11 - Elements of Exterior Calculus and Symplectic Geometry
12 - Pontryagin Maximum Principle
13 - Examples of Optimal Control Problems
14 - Hamiltonian Systems with Convex Hamiltonians
15 - Linear Time-Optimal Problem
16 - Linear-Quadratic Problem
17 - Sufficient Optimality Conditions, Hamilton-Jacobi Equation, and Dynamic Programming
18 - Hamiltonian Systems for Geometric Optimal Control Problems
19 - Examples of Optimal Control Problems on Compact Lie Groups
20 - Second Order Optimality Conditions
21 - Jacobi Equation
22 - Reduction
23 - Curvature
24 - Rolling Bodies
A. Appendix
References
List of Figures
Index