Electrical, mechanical, and aerospace engineers offer nine reviews of the large territory in which the domains of digital control and digital signal processing overlap. Their topics include the design of two-dimensional recursive digital filters, a periodic fixed-architecture approach to multirate digital control design, optimal finite wordlength digital control with skewed sampling, bounds for the solution of the Riccati equation for discrete-time control systems, and the history and trends of the field. Reproduced from typescripts. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.
Praise for the Series:
"This book will be a useful reference to control engineers and researchers. The papers contained cover well the recent advances in the field of modern control theory."
--IEEE Group Correspondence
"This book will help all those researchers who valiantly try to keep abreast of what is new in the theory and practice of optimal control."
--Control
Arvustused
"This book will be a useful reference to control engineers and researchers. The papers contained cover well the recent advances in the field of modern control theory." --IEEE Group Correspondence
"This book will help all those researchers who valiantly try to keep abreast of what is new in the theory and practice of optimal control." --Control
E.S. Hamby, Y.-C. Juan, and P.T. Kabamba, Optimal Hold Functions for
Digital Control Systems. G.-Q. Xing and P.M. Bainum, Actuator Placement Using
Degree of Controllability for Discrete-Time Systems. Z. Gao, Techniques in
Reconfigurable Control System Design. T.T. Hartley, R.J. Veillette, and G.
Cook, Techniques in Deadbeat and One-Step-Ahead Control. A. Garcia and M.
Hubbard, Discrete-Time LQR Techniques in the Control of Modern Canals. J.P.
Barbot, M. Djemai, S. Monaco, and D. Normand-Cyrot, Analysis and Control of
Nonlinear Singularly Perturbed Systems under Sampling. M. Jamshidi, CAD
Techniques in Control Systems. G. Casalino, A. Ferrara, R. Minciardi, and T.
Parisini, Implicit Model Techniques and Their Application to LQ Adaptive
Control. Subject Index.
Cornelius T. Leondes received his B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania and has held numerous positions in industrial and academic institutions. He is currently a Professor Emeritus at the University of California, Los Angeles. He has also served as the Boeing Professor at the University of Washington and as an adjunct professor at the University of California, San Diego. He is the author, editor, or co-author of more than 100 textbooks and handbooks and has published more than 200 technical papers. In addition, he has been a Guggenheim Fellow, Fulbright Research Scholar, IEEE Fellow, and a recipient of IEEE's Baker Prize Award and Barry Carlton Award.