scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessBook

Multiple-Input Describing Functions and Nonlinear System Design

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The theory of automatic control has been advanced in important ways during recent years, particularly with respect to stability and optimal control, but these theories do not, however, lay to rest all questions of importance to the control engineer.
Abstract
ABRAMSON Information theory and coding BATTIN Astronautical guidance BLACHMAN Noise and its effect on communication BREMER Superconductive devices BROXMEYER Inertial navigation systems GELB AND VANDER VELDE Multiple-input describing functions and nonlinear system design GILL Introduction to the theory of finite-state machines HANCOCK AND WINTZ Signal detection theory HUELSMAN Circuits, matrices, and linear vector spaces KELSO Radio ray propagation in the ionosphere MERRIAM Optimization theory and the design of feedback control systems MUUM Biological control systems analysis NEWCOMB Linear multiport synthesis PAPOULIS The fourier integral and its applications R. N. BRACEWELL) STEINBERG AND LEQUEUX (TRANSLATOR Radio astronomy WEEKS Antenna engineering PREFACE The theory of automatic control has been advanced in important ways during recent years, particularly with respect to stability and optimal control. These are significant contributions which appeal to many workers, including the writers, because they answer important questions and are both theoretically elegant and practically useful. These theories do not, however, lay to rest all questions of importance to the control engineer. The designer of the attitude control system for a space vehicle booster which, for simplicity, utilizes a rate-switched engine gimbal drive, must know the characteristics of the limit cycle oscillation that the system will sustain and must have some idea of how the system will respond to attitude commands while continuing to limit-cycle. The designer of a chemical process control system must be able to predict the transient oscillations the process may experience during start-up due to the limited magnitudes of important variables in the system. The designer of a radar antenna pointing system with limited torque capability must be able to predict the rms pointing error due to random wind disturbances on the antenna, and must understand how these random disturbances will influence the behavior of the system in its response to command inputs. But more important than just being able to evaluate how a given system will behave in a postulated situation is the fact that these control engineers must design their systems to meet specifications on important characteristics. Thus a complicated exact analytical tool, if one existed, would be of less value to the designer than an approximate tool which is simple enough in application to give insight into the trends in system behavior as a function of system parameter values or possible compensations, hence providing the basis for system design. As an analytical tool to answer questions such as these in a way …

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Systematic approach to linear approximation of non-linear stochastic systems Part 1. Asymptotic expansions

TL;DR: A new technique is presented for the analysis ofNon-linear stochastic systems in which they are represented by a series of non-linearly coupled linear systems and a measure of the error and second-order correction terms for the linear approximation is obtained.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nonlinear identification and optimal feedforward friction compensation for a motion platform

TL;DR: This study first identified the nonlinear dynamics of the platform using Higher Order Sinusoidal Input Describing Function based system identification, and modeled the friction using the Stribeck model and identified its parameters through a procedure including a special reference signal and the Nelder–Mead algorithm.
Journal ArticleDOI

Describing function analysis and oscillations in non-linear networks

TL;DR: It is shown that provided the system gain is sufficiently small, the first-order describing function provides an analytically correct method for sustained oscillation in a class of non-linear networks.

Influence of jitter on limit cycles in bang-bang clock and data recovery circuits

TL;DR: This work investigates the relationship between the input noise and the amplitude of eventual limit cycles in bang-bang clock and data recovery circuits and allows to quantify the influence of the different loop parameters on the minimal amount of input jitter needed to destroy the limit cycle.
References
More filters
Book

Analytical design of linear feedback controls

TL;DR: Only for you today!
Journal ArticleDOI

Nonlinear control systems with random inputs

TL;DR: In this article, the describing-function method for the analysis of nonlinear systems with sinusoidal inputs is interpreted as a mean-square quasi-linearization technique and is generalized to apply to random signals.