A separation theorem for joint sensor and actuator scheduling with guaranteed performance bounds
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2207184
DOI10.1016/j.automatica.2020.109054zbMath1451.93154arXiv2005.03143OpenAlexW3029436062MaRDI QIDQ2207184
Publication date: 22 October 2020
Published in: Automatica (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/2005.03143
separation principlefundamental limitsnetwork analysis and controlsparse sensor and actuator selections
Controllability (93B05) Linear systems in control theory (93C05) Observability (93B07) Networked control (93B70)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- On the complexity of the constrained input selection problem for structural linear systems
- Optimal actuator/sensor location for active noise regulator and tracking control problems
- Algorithms for joint sensor and control nodes selection in dynamic networks
- Interlacing families. II: Mixed characteristic polynomials and the Kadison-Singer problem
- The robust minimal controllability problem
- Analysis and optimization of certain qualities of controllability and observability for linear dynamical systems
- On the determination of optimal costly measurement strategies for linear stochastic systems
- Glycolytic Oscillations and Limits on Robust Efficiency
- Convex Relaxation for Optimal Distributed Control Problems
- Regularization for Design
- Graph Distances and Controllability of Networks
- Principal component analysis in linear systems: Controllability, observability, and model reduction
- Network Abstraction With Guaranteed Performance Bounds
- Structural Analysis and Optimal Design of Distributed System Throttlers
- Minimal Reachability is Hard To Approximate
- Heterogeneity of central nodes explains the benefits of time-varying control scheduling in complex dynamical networks
- Controllability Metrics, Limitations and Algorithms for Complex Networks
- Minimal Controllability Problems
- Minimal Actuator Placement With Bounds on Control Effort
- On Submodularity and Controllability in Complex Dynamical Networks
- Near-Optimal Column-Based Matrix Reconstruction
- Approximation of Large-Scale Dynamical Systems
- A framework for optimal actuator/sensor selection in a control system
This page was built for publication: A separation theorem for joint sensor and actuator scheduling with guaranteed performance bounds