DocumentCode
1527047
Title
A.A. Andronov and the development of Soviet control engineering
Author
Bissell, Chris
Author_Institution
Open Univ., Milton Keynes, UK
Volume
18
Issue
1
fYear
1998
fDate
2/1/1998 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
56
Lastpage
62
Abstract
Control engineering saw rapid development in many countries in the period immediately following World War II. Engineers and scientists concerned with control problems formed new professional groupings; university courses in the subject began to be offered; and research groups were set up in industrial, academic, and government laboratories. Hitherto secret wartime work was widely disseminated, and new military, industrial, and other applications of the emerging discipline were identified. Aleksandr Aleksandrovich Andronov (1901-1952) was a key figure in the development of control engineering in the former Soviet Union during this period, yet his name and his contributions to control theory and nonlinear dynamics are much less well known in the West than they deserve. The aim of this article is to give a brief introduction to Andronov´s work, concentrating on his background in nonlinear dynamics, and his subsequent role in stimulating Soviet research into control engineering-most significantly in the wake of the founding of his Moscow seminar on the topic in 1944
Keywords
control engineering; history; nonlinear dynamical systems; Aleksandr Aleksandrovich Andronov; Soviet control engineering; control theory; nonlinear dynamics; Automation; Collaborative work; Control engineering; Crystals; Inductance; Limit-cycles; Nonlinear optics; Optical scattering; Physics; Raman scattering;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Control Systems, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1066-033X
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/37.648630
Filename
648630
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