Comparison of Non-deterministic Linear Systems by (γ,δ)-Similarity
Abstract
We introduce (γ,δ)-similarity, a notion of system comparison that measures to what extent two stable linear dynamical systems behave similarly in an input-output sense. This behavioral similarity is characterized by measuring the sensitivity of the difference between the two output trajectories in terms of the external inputs to the two potentially non-deterministic systems. As such, (γ,δ)-similarity is a notion that characterizes approximation of input-output behavior, whereas existing notions of simulation target equivalence. Next, as this approximation is specified in terms of the L2 signal norm, (γ,δ)-similarity allows for integration with existing methods for analysis and synthesis of control systems, in particular, robust control techniques. We characterize the notion of (γ,δ)-similarity as a linear matrix inequality feasibility problem and derive its interpretation in terms of transfer matrices. Our study on the compositional properties of (γ,δ)-similarity shows that the notion is preserved through series and feedback interconnections. This highlights its potential application in compositional reasoning, namely abstraction and modular synthesis of large-scale interconnected dynamical systems. We further illustrate our results in an electrical network example.
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