Trajectory-based Robustness Analysis for Nonlinear Systems
Abstract
This paper considers the robustness of an uncertain nonlinear system along a finite-horizon trajectory. The uncertain system is modeled as a connection of a nonlinear system and a perturbation. The analysis relies on three ingredients. First, the nonlinear system is approximated by a linear time-varying (LTV) system via linearization along a trajectory. This linearization introduces an additional forcing input due to the nominal trajectory. Second, the input/output behavior of the perturbation is described by time-domain, integral quadratic constraints (IQCs). Third, a dissipation inequality is formulated to bound the worst-case deviation of an output signal due to the uncertainty. These steps yield a differential linear matrix inequality (DLMI) condition to bound the worst-case performance. The robustness condition is then converted to an equivalent condition in terms of a Riccati Differential Equation. This yields a computational method that avoids heuristics often used to solve DLMIs, e.g. time gridding. The approach is demonstrated by a two-link robotic arm example.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.