CDS 212 Fall 2010: Difference between revisions

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|[http://www.cds.caltech.edu/~sojoudi/BioMetabModeling.pdf BioMetabModeling (Slides)],[http://www.cds.caltech.edu/~sojoudi/DraftPrint.pdf Glycolysis (Paper)],[http://www.cds.caltech.edu/~sojoudi/Figures.pdf Figures]  
|[http://www.cds.caltech.edu/~sojoudi/BioMetabModeling.pdf BioMetabModeling (Slides)],[http://www.cds.caltech.edu/~sojoudi/DraftPrint.pdf Glycolysis (Paper)],[http://www.cds.caltech.edu/~sojoudi/Figures.pdf Figures],[http://www.cds.caltech.edu/~sojoudi/Chap6.pdf Chap6 (Slides)]
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Revision as of 05:34, 20 October 2010

Feedback Control Theory

Instructors

  • John Doyle, doyle@cds.caltech.edu
  • Lectures: Tu/Th, 2:30-4 pm, 314 Annenberg

Teaching Assistants

  • Somayeh Sojoudi, sojoudi@cds.caltech.edu
  • Richard Murray, murray@cds.caltech.edu

Course Description

Introduction to modern feedback control theory with emphasis on the role of feedback in overall system analysis and design. Examples drawn from throughout engineering and science. Open versus closed loop control. State-space methods, time and frequency domain, stability and stabilization, realization theory. Time-varying and nonlinear models. Uncertainty and robustness.

Announcements

  • 7 Oct 2010: Slides for lecture 4 (DFT-Ch 4) are now posted
  • 4 Oct 2010: Office Hours: Wed 4-5pm, 314 Annenberg
  • 29 Sep 2010: Slides for lecture 1 are now posted

Textbook

The two primary texts for the course (available via the online bookstore) are

 [DFT]  J. Doyle, B. Francis and A. Tannenbaum, Feedback Control Theory, Dover, 2009 (originally published by Macmillan, 1992). Available online at http://www.control.utoronto.ca/people/profs/francis/dft.html.
 [PD]  F. Paganini and G. Dullerud, A Course in Robust Control Theory, Springer, 2000.

The following additional texts may be useful for some students:

 [FBS]  K. J. Astrom and R. M. Murray, Feedback Systems: An Introduction for Scientists and Engineers, Princeton University Press, 2008. Available online at http://www.cds.caltech.edu/~murray/amwiki.

Lecture Schedule

Week Date Trunk Reading Homework Branch
1 28 Sep 
30 Sep
Norms for signals and systems DFT Ch 1, 2 
DP Ch 3
HW 1
2 5 Oct+
7 Oct
Feedback, stability and performance DFT Ch 3
(FBS 9.1-9.3)
(FBS 11.1-11.2)
HW 2
  • 6 Oct: Mung Chiang (Princeton), An Axiomatic Theory of Fairness
  • 6 Oct: Mung Chiang (Princeton), Can Random Access Be Optimal?
3 12 Oct+
14 Oct+
Uncertainty and robustness DFT Ch 4
(FBS 12.1‑12.3)
HW 3
  • 12 Oct: Raff D'Andrea (ETHZ), Some applications of distributed estimation and control
4 19 Oct
21 Oct+
Fundamental limits DFT Ch 6
(FBS 11.4, 12.4)
HW 4
5 26 Oct+
28 Oct*
Stability in state space
  • Realization theory, controllability, observability
  • Lyapunov equation and stability conditions
PD, Ch 2, 4, 5 HW 5
6 2 Nov*
4 Nov*
Model reduction, LMIs
  • Balanced realizations
  • KYP lemma
HW 6
  • Keith Glover
    • Model reduction
    • Loop shaping
7 9 Nov
11 Nov
Nonlinear systems
  • Stability of nonlinear systems
  • L2-gain for nonlinear systems
FBS, Ch 4 HW 7
8 16 Nov+
18 Nov
Sum-of-squares
  • Semi-algebraic sets
  • Semidefinite programming
  • Sum-of-squares
HW 8
  • IPAM: robust optimization
9 23 Nov+
  • Pablo Parrilo?
10 30 Nov
2 Dec
Links with nformation theory and statistical mechanics
  • IPAM: applications of optimization

Grading

The final grade will be based on homework and a final exam:

  • Homework (75%) - There will be 9 one-week problem sets, due in class one week after they are assigned. Late homework will not be accepted without prior permission from the instructor.
  • Final exam (25%) - The final will be handed out the last day of class and is due back at the end of finals week. Open book, time limit to be decided (likely N hours over a 4-8N hour period).

The lowest homework score you receive will be dropped in computing your homework average. In addition, if your score on the final is higher than the weighted average of your homework and final, your final will be used to determine your course grade.

Collaboration Policy

Collaboration on homework assignments is encouraged. You may consult outside reference materials, other students, the TA, or the instructor. Use of solutions from previous years in the course is not allowed. All solutions that are handed should reflect your understanding of the subject matter at the time of writing.

No collaboration is allowed on the final exam.

Additional References (Optional)

Date Reading
28 Sep  AldersonDoyle-tsmca (Paper),Glycolysis (Paper), SuppInfo, 1NetCmplxIntro (Slides)
5 Oct  layering (Slides)
19 Oct  BioMetabModeling (Slides),Glycolysis (Paper),Figures,Chap6 (Slides)

Old Announcements