NCS: Moving Horizon Estimation: Difference between revisions
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== Reading == | == Reading == | ||
<!-- A reading list for the lecture. This will typically be 3-5 articles or book chapters that are particularly relevant to the material being presented. The reading list should be annotated to explain how the articles fit into the topic for the lecture. --> | <!-- A reading list for the lecture. This will typically be 3-5 articles or book chapters that are particularly relevant to the material being presented. The reading list should be annotated to explain how the articles fit into the topic for the lecture. --> | ||
* <p>[http://pubs.acs.org/cgi-bin/abstract.cgi/iecred/2005/44/i08/abs/ie034308l.html Critical evaluation of extended Kalman filtering and moving horizon estimation], E.L. Haseltine and J.B. Rawlings, ''Ind. Eng. Chem. Res.'', vol. 44, no.8, 2005. Contains several examples where EKF and MHE have been applied. Discusses the differences. | * <p>[http://pubs.acs.org/cgi-bin/abstract.cgi/iecred/2005/44/i08/abs/ie034308l.html Critical evaluation of extended Kalman filtering and moving horizon estimation], E.L. Haseltine and J.B. Rawlings, ''Ind. Eng. Chem. Res.'', vol. 44, no.8, 2005. Contains several examples where EKF and MHE have been applied. Discusses the differences between the methods and when EKF is likely to fail. | ||
* <p>[http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?isnumber=26479&arnumber=1178905&count=27&index=5 Constrained State Estimation for Nonlinear Discrete-Time Systems: Stability and Moving Horizon Approximations], C.V. Rao, J.B. Rawlings, and D.Q. Mayne, ''IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control'', vol.48, no.2, 2003. A mathematical treatment of MHE and stability conditions are derived. Everybody should read at least Section I. | |||
* <p>[http://www.cs.unc.edu/~welch/media/pdf/kalman_intro.pdf An Introduction to the Kalman Filter], G. Welch and G. Bishop. Gives a brief introduction to the extended Kalman filter in discrete time.</p> | * <p>[http://www.cs.unc.edu/~welch/media/pdf/kalman_intro.pdf An Introduction to the Kalman Filter], G. Welch and G. Bishop. Gives a brief introduction to the extended Kalman filter in discrete time.</p> |
Revision as of 17:15, 19 April 2006
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In this lecture, we give an introduction to moving horizon estimation (MHE) and extended Kalman filters (EKF). These filter stuctures can be used with nonlinear models and are therefore more general than the standard Kalman filter. Furthermore, MHE can also take constraints on the noise and the state space, as well as asymmetric probability distributions, into account. MHE is dual to receding horizon control (RHC) and also relies on optimization software. The lecture ends with a brief discussion on stability properties of MHE.
Lecture Materials
Reading
Critical evaluation of extended Kalman filtering and moving horizon estimation, E.L. Haseltine and J.B. Rawlings, Ind. Eng. Chem. Res., vol. 44, no.8, 2005. Contains several examples where EKF and MHE have been applied. Discusses the differences between the methods and when EKF is likely to fail.
Constrained State Estimation for Nonlinear Discrete-Time Systems: Stability and Moving Horizon Approximations, C.V. Rao, J.B. Rawlings, and D.Q. Mayne, IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, vol.48, no.2, 2003. A mathematical treatment of MHE and stability conditions are derived. Everybody should read at least Section I.
An Introduction to the Kalman Filter, G. Welch and G. Bishop. Gives a brief introduction to the extended Kalman filter in discrete time.