DocumentCode
1559565
Title
The "First All-Union Conference on Automatic Control," Moscow, December 1940
Author
Bissell, Christopher C.
Author_Institution
Fac. of Technol., Open Univ., Milton Keynes, UK
Volume
22
Issue
1
fYear
2002
Firstpage
15
Lastpage
21
Abstract
Classical control theory and automation, contrary to what the author considers widely believed, did not begin almost entirely in the USA and the UK in the World War II. In particular, a conference held in Moscow in late 1940, but little known outside Russia, included papers on and discussion of: the Nyquist criterion; operator methods; transient response; the use of the operator exp(-Tp) to model a time delay of T seconds; and the |z| < 0 criterion for the stability of a sampled-data system. The author discusses the content of the conference, its political context and its historical significance.
Keywords
computerised control; control theory; history; First All-Union Conference on Automatic Control; Nyquist criterion; classical control theory; historical significance; operator methods; political context; sampled-data system stability; time delay; transient response; History;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Control Systems, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1066-033X
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/37.980243
Filename
980243
Link To Document