Higher-order techniques for some problems of nonlinear control (Q1886206)
From MaRDI portal
| This is the item page for this Wikibase entity, intended for internal use and editing purposes. Please use this page instead for the normal view: Higher-order techniques for some problems of nonlinear control |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 2115997
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | Higher-order techniques for some problems of nonlinear control |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 2115997 |
Statements
Higher-order techniques for some problems of nonlinear control (English)
0 references
16 November 2004
0 references
Summary: A natural first step when dealing with a nonlinear problem is an application of some version of the \textit{linearization principle}. This includes the well-known linearization principles for controllability, observability and stability and also first-order optimality conditions such as Lagrange multipliers rule or Pontryagin's maximum principle. In many interesting and important problems of nonlinear control the linearization principle fails to provide a solution. In the present paper we provide some examples of how higher-order methods of differential geometric control theory can be used for the study of nonlinear control systems in such cases. The presentation includes: nonlinear systems with impulsive and distribution-like inputs; second-order optimality conditions for bang-bang extremals of optimal control problems; methods of higher-order averaging for studying stability and stabilization of time-variant control systems.
0 references
linearization principle
0 references
Pontryagin's maximum principle
0 references
high-order optimality conditions
0 references
bang-bang extremals
0 references
nonlinear control
0 references
optimal control
0 references
generalized inputs
0 references
stability and stabilization
0 references
averaging
0 references
geometric control
0 references
time-variant control systems
0 references