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Journal ArticleDOI

Feedback and optimal sensitivity: Model reference transformations, multiplicative seminorms, and approximate inverses

George Zames
- 01 Apr 1981 - 
- Vol. 26, Iss: 2, pp 301-320
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TLDR
In this article, the problem of sensitivity reduction by feedback is formulated as an optimization problem and separated from the problems of stabilization, and the feedback schemes obtainable from a given plant are parameterized.
Abstract
In this paper, the problem of sensitivity, reduction by feedback is formulated as an optimization problem and separated from the problem of stabilization. Stable feedback schemes obtainable from a given plant are parameterized. Salient properties of sensitivity reducing schemes are derived, and it is shown that plant uncertainty reduces the ability, of feedback to reduce sensitivity. The theory is developed for input-output systems in a general setting of Banach algebras, and then specialized to a class of multivariable, time-invariant systems characterized by n \times n matrices of H^{\infty} frequency response functions, either with or without zeros in the right half-plane. The approach is based on the use of a weighted seminorm on the algebra of operators to measure sensitivity, and on the concept of an approximate inverse. Approximate invertibility, of the plant is shown to be a necessary and sufficient condition for sensitivity reduction. An indicator of approximate invertibility, called a measure of singularity, is introduced. The measure of singularity of a linear time-invariant plant is shown to be determined by the location of its right half-plane zeros. In the absence of plant uncertainty, the sensitivity, to output disturbances can be reduced to an optimal value approaching the singularity, measure. In particular, if there are no right half-plane zeros, sensitivity can be made arbitrarily small. The feedback schemes used in the optimization of sensitivity resemble the lead-lag networks of classical control design. Some of their properties, and methods of constructing them in special cases are presented.

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References
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The internal model principle for linear multivariable regulators

TL;DR: In this paper, structural stability of linear multivariable regulators is defined and necessary and sufficient structural criteria are obtained for linear multi-variable regulators which retain loop stability and output regulation in the presence of small perturbations, of specified types, in system parameters.
Journal ArticleDOI

A new approach to the sensitivity problem in multivariable feedback system design

TL;DR: In this paper, a new point of view for the parameter variation problem in linear multivariable systems is proposed, where output deviations due to parameter variations for an open-loop realization are related by a sensitivity matrix to the output deviations for a closed-loop (feedback) realization.
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On the metric complexity of casual linear systems: ε -Entropy and ε -Dimension for continuous time

TL;DR: In this article, the dependence of e-entropy and e-dimension on the accuracy of the estimation of e is characterized by order, type, and power indexes for a class of causal, linear, time-invariant, continuous-time systems under the assumptions that impulse responses, satisfy an exponential order condition and frequency responses satisfy an attenuation condition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Functional Analysis Applied to Nonlinear Feedback Systems

TL;DR: An operator theory is outlined for the general, nonlinear, feedback loop and it is shown that feedback reduces distortion for band-limited inputs and an iteration whose rate of convergence is optimized is derived.
Journal ArticleDOI

The feedback interconnection of lumped linear time-invariant systems☆

TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider the feedback interconnection of two multi-input multi-output subsystems characterized by rational transfer functions and show that the effect of output disturbances on stability is taken into account.
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