DocumentCode :
2592651
Title :
Missile autopilot design using the extended-mean assignment control. I. Stabilization
Author :
Zhu, J. Jim ; Mickle, M. Chris
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Louisiana State Univ., Baton Rouge, LA, USA
fYear :
1995
fDate :
12-14 Mar 1995
Firstpage :
247
Lastpage :
251
Abstract :
The paper presents a missile autopilot design using a recently developed extended mean assignment (EMA) control technique for linear time varying (LTV) systems. The EMA control technique is based on a new series D-eigenvalue (SD eigenvalue) concept in a way similar to the conventional pole placement design for linear time invariant (LTI) systems. The autopilot is to control the nonlinear, time varying pitch axis dynamics of a hypothetical tail controlled missile, which has been used as a benchmark in a number of recent studies on nonlinear, gain scheduling design techniques. A significant improvement of the EMA controller over the previous design is that the new EMA controller uses complex value SD-eigenvalues to avoid singularities known as finite escapes. The nonlinear dynamics of the missile is rendered into a linear one that is tractable by the EMA control technique via the classical linearization along a nominal normal acceleration profile, followed by a linear coordinate transformation. This is the first application of the EMA control to a state space LTV model that is not in the phase variable canonical form. Simulation results are presented for the zero input stabilization; the complete tracking problem will be studied in Part II of the paper
Keywords :
eigenvalues and eigenfunctions; missile guidance; nonlinear control systems; stability; time-varying systems; EMA control technique; SD eigenvalue; classical linearization; conventional pole placement design; extended mean assignment; extended-mean assignment control; hypothetical tail controlled missile; linear coordinate transformation; linear time invariant systems; linear time varying systems; missile autopilot design; nominal normal acceleration profile; nonlinear gain scheduling design techniques; phase variable canonical form; series D-eigenvalue; state space LTV model; time varying pitch axis dynamics; zero input stabilization; Acceleration; Control systems; Design engineering; Design methodology; Eigenvalues and eigenfunctions; Missiles; Polynomials; State feedback; State-space methods; Time varying systems;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
System Theory, 1995., Proceedings of the Twenty-Seventh Southeastern Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Starkville, MS
ISSN :
0094-2898
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-6985-3
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/SSST.1995.390575
Filename :
390575
Link To Document :
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