2013
Robust and Adaptive ControlWith Aerospace ApplicationsAuthors:
- Eugene Lavretsky,
- Kevin A. Wise
- …show all 2hide
ISBN: 978-1-4471-4395-6 (Print) 978-1-4471-4396-3 (Online)
With Aerospace Applications
Series: Advanced Textbooks in Control and Signal Processing
Lavretsky, Eugene, Wise, Kevin
2013, XVII, 454 p. 194 illus., 118 in color. With online files/update.
ISBN 978-1-4471-4396-3
Immediately available per PDF-download (no DRM, watermarked)
About this textbook
- Teaches the reader efficient robust and adaptive control theoretic design and analysis methods
- Shows the reader how to convert theoretically-based control algorithms into realistic real-world aerospace applications
- Both authors have decades of experience working in the aerospace industry so examples and case studies are authoritative MATLAB® code and solutions manual for problems provided as supplementary material
The text is a three-part treatment, beginning with robust and optimal linear control methods and moving on to a self-contained presentation of the design and analysis of model reference adaptive control (MRAC) for nonlinear uncertain dynamical systems. Recent extensions and modifications to MRAC design are included, as are guidelines for combining robust optimal and MRAC controllers. Features of the text include:
· case studies that demonstrate the benefits of robust and adaptive control for piloted, autonomous and experimental aerial platforms;
· detailed background material for each chapter to motivate theoretical developments;
· realistic examples and simulation data illustrating key features of the methods described; and
· problem solutions for instructors and MATLAB® code provided electronically.
The theoretical content and practical applications reported address real-life aerospace problems, being based on numerous transitions of control-theoretic results into operational systems and airborne vehicles that are drawn from the authors’ extensive professional experience with The Boeing Company. The systems covered are challenging, often open-loop unstable, with uncertainties in their dynamics, and thus requiring both persistently reliable control and the ability to track commands either from a pilot or a guidance computer.
Readers are assumed to have a basic understanding of root locus, Bode diagrams, and Nyquist plots, as well as linear algebra, ordinary differential equations, and the use of state-space methods in analysis and modeling of dynamical systems.
Robust and Adaptive Control is intended to methodically teach senior undergraduate and graduate students how to construct stable and predictable control algorithms for realistic industrial applications. Practicing engineers and academic researchers will also find the book of great instructional value.
Table of contents Part I: Robust and Optimal Control of Linear Systems.- Introduction to Control of Aerial Vehicles.- Command Tracking and Servomechanism Design.0 Optimal Control and Linear Quadratic Regulator (LQR).- H-infinity Optimal Control.- Stability Margins and Frequency Domain Consideration.- Projective Control.- Linear Quadratic Gaussian with Loop-transfer Recovery (LQG/LTR) Control.- Simulation Examplse and Case Studies.- Exercises.- Part II: Model Reference Adaptive Control.- Motivation.- Lyapunov Stability Theory: Introduction and Overview.- Adaptive Control Architectures: Direct vs. Indirect.- MRAC and Model Matching Conditions.- Adaptive Dynamic Inversion.- Persistency of Excitation.- Enforcing Robustness in MRAC Systems.- Approximation-based MRAC.- Adaptive Augmentation of a Linear Baseline Controller.- Simulation Examples and Case Studies.- Exercises.- Part III: MRAC Design Extensions.- Limited-authority Adaptive Control.- Predictor-based Control.- Combined/Composite MRAC.- Filtered MRAC Design.- MRAC Design Using Output Feedback.- Simulation Examples and Case Studies.- Conclusions, Future Work and Flight Control Challenges.
- Authors & Editors
Eugene Lavretsky is a Boeing Senior Technical Fellow, at the Boeing Research & Technology in Huntington Beach, CA. During his career at Boeing, Dr. Lavretsky has developed flight control methods, tools and processes for transport aircraft, advanced unmanned aircraft, and weapon system programs. Highlights include the MD-11 aircraft, NASA F/A-18 Autonomous Formation Flight and High Speed Civil Transport aircraft, JDAM guided munitions, and X-45 J-UCAS. His research interests include robust and adaptive control, system identification and flight dynamics. He has written over 90 technical articles, and has taught control courses at the California Long Beach State University, Claremont Graduate University, California Institute of Technology, University of Missouri Science and Technology, and at the University of Southern California. Dr. Lavretsky is an Associate Fellow of AIAA and a Sr. Member of IEEE. He is the recipient of the AIAA Mechanics and Control of Flight Award, (2009).
Kevin A. Wise is a Boeing Senior Technical Fellow, at the Boeing Phantom Works, Saint Louis, Missouri. During his career at Boeing, Dr. Wise has developed vehicle management systems, flight control systems, and control system design tools and processes for several advanced unmanned aircraft and weapon system programs. Highlights include the hydrogen-powered Phantom Eye High Altitude Long Endurance (HALE)UAV, Laser-JDAM (in production), X-45A J-UCAS, X-36 RESTORE, Miniaturized Munitions Technology Demonstrator, 4th Generation Ejection Seat (first ever supersonic ejection), JDAM (in production), Army Short Range UAV, and the HAVE SLICK missile. His research interests include intelligent autonomy, aircraft and missile dynamics and control, robust adaptive control, optimal control, and robustness theory. He has authored more than 70 technical articles, and has taught graduate level control theory since 1987 at Washington University in St. Louis, Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville, and at the University of Missouri Science and Technology. Dr. Wise is a Fellow of the IEEE and an Associate Fellow of the AIAA. He is the recipient of the IFAC Control Engineering Practice Award, (2007), and the AIAA Mechanics and Control of Flight Award, (2004).