The essential introduction to the principles and applications of feedback systems—now fully revised and expanded This textbook covers the mathematics needed to model, analyze, and design feedback systems. Now more user-friendly than ever, this revised and expanded edition of Feedback Systems is a one-volume resource for students and researchers in mathematics and engineering. It has applications across a range of disciplines that utilize feedback in physical, biological, information, and economic systems. Karl Åström and Richard Murray use techniques from physics, computer science, and operations research to introduce control-oriented modeling. They begin with state space tools for analysis and design, including stability of solutions, Lyapunov functions, reachability, state feedback observability, and estimators. The matrix exponential plays a central role in the analysis of linear control systems, allowing a concise development of many of the key concepts for this class of models. Åström and Murray then develop and explain tools in the frequency domain, including transfer functions, Nyquist analysis, PID control, frequency domain design, and robustness. Features a new chapter on design principles and tools, illustrating the types of problems that can be solved using feedback Includes a new chapter on fundamental limits and new material on the Routh-Hurwitz criterion and root locus plots Provides exercises at the end of every chapter Comes with an electronic solutions manual An ideal textbook for undergraduate and graduate students Indispensable for researchers seeking a self-contained resource on control theory
Introduction to Feedback Systems
This book provides an accessible introduction to the principles and tools for modeling, analyzing, and synthesizing biomolecular systems.
This book provides techniques for the analysis and solution of these problems. The text begins with an introduction to feedback theory and exposition of problems of plant identification, representation, and analysis.
With this book, author Philipp K. Janert demonstrates how the same principles that govern cruise control in your car also apply to data center management and other enterprise systems.
... The Siegel modular variety of degree two and level four/Cohomology of the Siegel modular group of degree two and level four, 1998 Florin Rădulescu, The T-equivariant form of the Berezin quantization of the upper half plane, ...
Contrary to previous work in this area, the treatment heavily emphasizes and exploits the causality of the operators involved. This brings the work into closer contact with the theory of dynamical systems and automata.
... control objectives: regulation, disturbance rejection, and optimization. 5. Desirable properties of feedback control systems are (a) stability (e.g., a ... II System Modeling 2 Model Construction All models are EXERCISES 27 1.9 Exercises.
'Much more than an introduction, John Morecroft's Strategic Modelling and Business Dynamics uses interactive “mini-simulators and microworlds” to create an engaging and effective learning environment in which readers, whatever their ...
Dynamics of Feedback Systems
A valuable reference for researchers, this text offers a sound starting point for scientists entering this fascinating and rapidly developing field.