Stable Fiber-Koopman Residual Dynamics for Environment-Constrained Robust Control
Abstract
Learning-based dynamical models face a persistent tension between expressiveness and formal guarantees: richer model classes improve predictive accuracy, but their stability properties are typically verified only empirically, if at all. This paper proposes Stable Fiber-Koopman Residual Dynamics (SFKD), a unified framework that simultaneously addresses environment-aware geometric consistency, latent-space stability certification, and bounded residual perturbation propagation. Concretely, SFKD constructs a fiber bundle latent manifold whose fibers encode environment-specific dynamics; an environment-conditioned Koopman operator governs the dominant linear evolution on each fiber; and a contraction-constrained residual neural network captures unmodeled nonlinear effects while admitting an explicit input-to-state stability (ISS) certificate. The resulting model is embedded in a sampling-based MPPI controller for autonomous vehicle path tracking under variable surface conditions and wind disturbances. Theoretical analysis establishes ISS of the latent dynamics and a finite ultimate bound on tracking error. Numerical experiments against five baselines -- Koopman MPC, Neural ODE, ICODE, ControlSynth, and ICODE-MPPI -- demonstrate a 31\% reduction in tracking RMSE, a 44\% improvement in control smoothness, and near-zero latent stability violation rate across environment-switching scenarios.
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