Title :
Some adaptive control problems which convert to a "classical" problem in several complex variables
Author :
Helton, J. William
Author_Institution :
California Univ., San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA
fDate :
12/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
We discuss the equivalence of bi-H∞ control problems to certain problems of approximation and interpolation by analytic functions in several complex variables. In bi-H∞ control, the goal is to perform H∞ control design for a plant where part of it is known and a stable subsystem δ is not known, i.e. the response at "frequency" s is P(s, δ(s)). We assume that once our system is running, we can identify δ online. Thus the problem is to design a function K off-line that uses this information to produce a H∞ controller via the formula K(s, δ(s)). The controller should yield a closed loop system with H∞ gain at most γ no matter which δ occurs. This is a frequency domain problem. The article shows how several bi-H∞ control problems convert to two complex variable interpolation problems. These precisely generalize the classical (one complex variable) interpolation (AAK-commutant lifting) problems which lay at the core of H∞ control. These problems are hard, but the last decade has seen substantial success on them in the operator theory community. In the most ideal of bi-H∞ cases these lead to a necessary and sufficient treatment of the control problem
Keywords :
H∞ control; adaptive control; approximation theory; closed loop systems; control system synthesis; frequency-domain synthesis; interpolation; AAK-commutant lifting problems; H∞ control design; adaptive control problems; analytic functions; approximation; bi-H∞ control problems; closed-loop system; complex variable interpolation problems; complex variables; frequency domain problem; interpolation; one-complex-variable interpolation; online subsystem identification; operator theory; unknown stable subsystem; Adaptive control; Closed loop systems; Control design; Control systems; Control theory; Frequency domain analysis; Function approximation; Interpolation; Linear matrix inequalities; Systems engineering and theory;
Journal_Title :
Automatic Control, IEEE Transactions on