CDS 212, Homework 1, Fall 2010: Difference between revisions
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{{CDS homework  | {{CDS homework  | ||
  | instructor = J. Doyle  |   | instructor = J. Doyle  | ||
  | course = CDS   |   | course = CDS 212  | ||
  | semester = Fall 2010  |   | semester = Fall 2010  | ||
  | title = Problem Set #1  |   | title = Problem Set #1  | ||
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</amsmath></center>  | </amsmath></center>  | ||
where <amsmath>\|\cdot\|</amsmath> is any norm on signals.  | where <amsmath>\|\cdot\|</amsmath> is any norm on signals.  | ||
</li>  | </li>  | ||
Latest revision as of 17:42, 28 September 2010
| J. Doyle | Issued: 28 Sep 2010 | 
| CDS 212, Fall 2010 | Due: 7 Oct 2010 | 
Reading
- DFT, Chapters 1 and 2
 - Dullerud and Paganini, Ch 3
 
Problems
- [DFT 2.1, page 28
Suppose that <amsmath>u(t)</amsmath> is a continuous signal whose derivative <amsmath>\dot u(t)</amsmath> is also continuous. Which of the following quantities qualifies as a norm for <amsmath>u</amsmath>:- <amsmath>\textstyle \sup_t |\dot u(t)|</amsmath>
 - <amsmath>\textstyle |u(0)| + \sup_t |\dot u(t)|</amsmath>
 - <amsmath>\textstyle \max \{ \sup_t |u(t)|,\, \sup_t |\dot u(t)| \}</amsmath>
 - <amsmath>\textstyle \sup_t |u(t)| + \sup_t |\dot u(t)|</amsmath>
 
Make sure to give a thorough answer (not just yes or no).
 -  [DFT 2.4, page 29] 
Let <amsmath>D</amsmath> be a pure time delay of <amsmath>\tau</amsmath> seconds with transfer function <amsmath> \widehat D(s) = e^{-s \tau} </amsmath>. A norm <amsmath>\|\cdot\|</amsmath> on transfer functions is time-delay invariant if for every bounded transfer function <amsmath>\widehat G</amsmath> and every <amsmath>\tau > 0</amsmath> we have<amsmath> \| \widehat D \widehat G \| = \| \widehat G \|
</amsmath>Determine if the 2-norm and <amsmath>\infty</amsmath>-norm are time-delay invariant.
 -  [DFT 2.5, page 30] 
Compute the 1-norm of the impluse response corresponding to the transfer function <amsmath> \frac{1}{\tau s + 1}, \quad \tau > 0 </amsmath>. -  [DFT 2.7, page 30] 
Derive the <amsmath>\infty</amsmath>-norm to <amsmath>\infty</amsmath>-norm system gain for a stable, proper plant <amsmath>\widehat G</amsmath>. (Hint: write <amsmath>\widehat G = c + \widehat G_1</amsmath> where <amsmath>c</amsmath> is a constant and <amsmath>\widehat G_1</amsmath> is strictly proper.) -  [DFT 2.8, page 30] 
Let <amsmath>\widehat G</amsmath> be a stable, proper plant (but not necessarily strictly proper).- Show that the <amsmath>\infty</amsmath>-norm of the output <amsmath>y</amsmath> given an input <amsmath>u(t) = \sin(\omega t)</amsmath> is <amsmath>|\widehat G(jw)|</amsmath>.
 - Show that the 2-norm to 2-norm system gain for <amsmath>\widehat G</amsmath> is <amsmath>\| \widehat G \|_\infty</amsmath> (just as in the strictly proper case).
 
 - [DFT 2.11, page 30] 
Consider a system with transfer function <amsmath>\widehat G(s) = \frac{s+2}{4s + 1}</amsmath> and input <amsmath>u</amsmath> and output <amsmath>y</amsmath>. Compute<amsmath> \| G \|_1 = \sup_{\|u\|_\infty = 1} \| y \|_\infty</amsmath>and find an input which achieves the supremum.
 -  [DFT 2.12, page 30] 
For a linear system with input <amsmath>u</amsmath> and output <amsmath>y</amsmath>, prove that<amsmath> \sup_{\|u\| \leq 1} \| y \| = \sup_{\|u\| = 1} \| y \|</amsmath>where <amsmath>\|\cdot\|</amsmath> is any norm on signals.