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Highlighting the control of networked robotic systems, this book
synthesizes a unified passivity-based approach to an emerging
cross-disciplinary subject. Thanks to this unified approach,
readers can access various state-of-the-art research fields by
studying only the background foundations associated with passivity.
In addition to the theoretical results and techniques, the authors
provide experimental case studies on testbeds of robotic systems
including networked haptic devices, visual robotic systems, robotic
network systems and visual sensor network systems. The text begins
with an introduction to passivity and passivity-based control
together with the other foundations needed in this book. The main
body of the book consists of three parts. The first examines how
passivity can be utilized for bilateral teleoperation and
demonstrates the inherent robustness of the passivity-based
controller against communication delays. The second part emphasizes
passivity's usefulness for visual feedback control and estimation.
Convergence is rigorously proved even when other passive components
are interconnected. The passivity approach is also differentiated
from other methodologies. The third part presents the unified
passivity-based control-design methodology for multi-agent systems.
This scheme is shown to be either immediately applicable or easily
extendable to the solution of various motion coordination problems
including 3-D attitude/pose synchronization, flocking control and
cooperative motion estimation. Academic researchers and
practitioners working in systems and control and/or robotics will
appreciate the potential of the elegant and novel approach to the
control of networked robots presented here. The limited background
required and the case-study work described also make the text
appropriate for and, it is hoped, inspiring to students.
This book gathers contributions from a multidisciplinary research
team comprised of control engineering and economics researchers and
formed to address a central interdisciplinary social issue, namely
economically enabled energy management. The book's primary focus is
on achieving optimal energy management that is viable from both an
engineering and economic standpoint. In addition to the theoretical
results and techniques presented, several chapters highlight
experimental case studies, which will benefit academic researchers
and practitioners alike. The first three chapters present
comprehensive overviews of respective social contexts, underscore
the pressing need for economically efficient energy management
systems and academic work on this emerging research topic, and
identify fundamental differences between approaches in control
engineering and economics. In turn, the next three chapters
(Chapters 4-6) provide economics-oriented approaches to the
subject. The following five chapters (Chapters 7-11) address
optimal energy market design, integrating both physical and
economic models. The book's last three chapters (Chapters 12-14)
mainly focus on the engineering aspects of next-generation energy
management, though economic factors are also shown to play
important roles.
This book gathers contributions from a multidisciplinary research
team comprised of control engineering and economics researchers and
formed to address a central interdisciplinary social issue, namely
economically enabled energy management. The book's primary focus is
on achieving optimal energy management that is viable from both an
engineering and economic standpoint. In addition to the theoretical
results and techniques presented, several chapters highlight
experimental case studies, which will benefit academic researchers
and practitioners alike. The first three chapters present
comprehensive overviews of respective social contexts, underscore
the pressing need for economically efficient energy management
systems and academic work on this emerging research topic, and
identify fundamental differences between approaches in control
engineering and economics. In turn, the next three chapters
(Chapters 4-6) provide economics-oriented approaches to the
subject. The following five chapters (Chapters 7-11) address
optimal energy market design, integrating both physical and
economic models. The book's last three chapters (Chapters 12-14)
mainly focus on the engineering aspects of next-generation energy
management, though economic factors are also shown to play
important roles.
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