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This book is the result of our teaching over the years an
undergraduate course on Linear Optimal Systems to applied
mathematicians and a first-year graduate course on Linear Systems
to engineers. The contents of the book bear the strong influence of
the great advances in the field and of its enormous literature.
However, we made no attempt to have a complete coverage. Our
motivation was to write a book on linear systems that covers finite
dimensional linear systems, always keeping in mind the main purpose
of engineering and applied science, which is to analyze, design,
and improve the performance of phy sical systems. Hence we discuss
the effect of small nonlinearities, and of perturbations of
feedback. It is our on the data; we face robustness issues and
discuss the properties hope that the book will be a useful
reference for a first-year graduate student. We assume that a
typical reader with an engineering background will have gone
through the conventional undergraduate single-input single-output
linear systems course; an elementary course in control is not
indispensable but may be useful for motivation. For readers from a
mathematical curriculum we require only familiarity with techniques
of linear algebra and of ordinary differential equations."
This book is the result of our teaching over the years an
undergraduate course on Linear Optimal Systems to applied
mathematicians and a first-year graduate course on Linear Systems
to engineers. The contents of the book bear the strong influence of
the great advances in the field and of its enormous literature.
However, we made no attempt to have a complete coverage. Our
motivation was to write a book on linear systems that covers finite
dimensional linear systems, always keeping in mind the main purpose
of engineering and applied science, which is to analyze, design,
and improve the performance of phy sical systems. Hence we discuss
the effect of small nonlinearities, and of perturbations of
feedback. It is our on the data; we face robustness issues and
discuss the properties hope that the book will be a useful
reference for a first-year graduate student. We assume that a
typical reader with an engineering background will have gone
through the conventional undergraduate single-input single-output
linear systems course; an elementary course in control is not
indispensable but may be useful for motivation. For readers from a
mathematical curriculum we require only familiarity with techniques
of linear algebra and of ordinary differential equations.
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