LMIs in Control/Stability Analysis/Strong Stabilizability: Difference between revisions
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Continuous-Time Strong Stabilizability
Definition
Consider a continuous-time LTI system, , with state-space realization (, , , ), where , , and , and it is assumed that (, ) is stabilizable, (, ) is detectable, and the transfer matrix has no poles on the imaginary axis.
The system is strongly stabilizable if there exist , , and , where , such that
LMIs
where and , is the solution to the Lyapunov equation given by
Moreover, a controller that strongly stabilizes is given by the state-space realization
Discrete-Time Strong Stabilizability
Definition
Consider a discrete-time LTI system, , with state-space realization (, , , ), where , , and , and it is assumed that (, ) is stabilizable, (, ) is detectable, and the transfer matrix has no poles on the unit circle.
The system is strongly stabilizable is there exist , , and , where , such that
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,
,
where
,
,
,
,
is the solution to the discrete-time Lyapunov equation given by
.
Moreover, a discrete-time controller that strongly stabilizes is given by the state-space realization
,
.
Proof
this ensures that the feedback controller defined by and ,
renders the closed-loop system asymptotically stable and
ensures that the feedback controller defined by and has a finite norm, and thus is asymptotically stable.