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Mathematical Control Theory is a branch of Mathematics having as
one of its main aims the establishment of a sound mathematical
foundation for the c- trol techniques employed in several di?erent
?elds of applications, including engineering, economy,
biologyandsoforth. Thesystemsarisingfromthese- plied Sciences are
modeled using di?erent types of mathematical formalism, primarily
involving Ordinary Di?erential Equations, or Partial Di?erential
Equations or Functional Di?erential Equations. These equations
depend on oneormoreparameters thatcanbevaried, andthusconstitute
thecontrol - pect of the problem. The parameters are to be chosen
soas to obtain a desired behavior for the system. From the many
di?erent problems arising in Control Theory, the C. I. M. E. school
focused on some aspects of the control and op- mization
ofnonlinear, notnecessarilysmooth, dynamical systems. Two points of
view were presented: Geometric Control Theory and Nonlinear Control
Theory. The C. I. M. E. session was arranged in ?ve six-hours
courses delivered by Professors A. A. Agrachev (SISSA-ISAS, Trieste
and Steklov Mathematical Institute, Moscow), A. S. Morse (Yale
University, USA), E. D. Sontag (Rutgers University, NJ, USA), H. J.
Sussmann (Rutgers University, NJ, USA) and V. I. Utkin (Ohio State
University Columbus, OH, USA). We now brie?y describe the
presentations. Agrachev's contribution began with the investigation
of second order - formation in smooth optimal control problems as a
means of explaining the variational and dynamical nature of
powerful concepts and results such as Jacobi ?elds, Morse's index
formula, Levi-Civita connection, Riemannian c- vature.
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