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This book presents some facts and methods of the Mathematical
Control Theory treated from the geometric point of view. The book
is mainly based on graduate courses given by the first coauthor in
the years 2000-2001 at the International School for Advanced
Studies, Trieste, Italy. Mathematical prerequisites are reduced to
standard courses of Analysis and Linear Algebra plus some basic
Real and Functional Analysis. No preliminary knowledge of Control
Theory or Differential Geometry is required. What this book is
about? The classical deterministic physical world is described by
smooth dynamical systems: the future in such a system is com
pletely determined by the initial conditions. Moreover, the near
future changes smoothly with the initial data. If we leave room for
"free will" in this fatalistic world, then we come to control
systems. We do so by allowing certain param eters of the dynamical
system to change freely at every instant of time. That is what we
routinely do in real life with our body, car, cooker, as well as
with aircraft, technological processes etc. We try to control all
these dynamical systems Smooth dynamical systems are governed by
differential equations. In this book we deal only with finite
dimensional systems: they are governed by ordi nary differential
equations on finite dimensional smooth manifolds. A control system
for us is thus a family of ordinary differential equations. The
family is parametrized by control parameters."
This book presents some facts and methods of the Mathematical
Control Theory treated from the geometric point of view. The book
is mainly based on graduate courses given by the first coauthor in
the years 2000-2001 at the International School for Advanced
Studies, Trieste, Italy. Mathematical prerequisites are reduced to
standard courses of Analysis and Linear Algebra plus some basic
Real and Functional Analysis. No preliminary knowledge of Control
Theory or Differential Geometry is required. What this book is
about? The classical deterministic physical world is described by
smooth dynamical systems: the future in such a system is com
pletely determined by the initial conditions. Moreover, the near
future changes smoothly with the initial data. If we leave room for
"free will" in this fatalistic world, then we come to control
systems. We do so by allowing certain param eters of the dynamical
system to change freely at every instant of time. That is what we
routinely do in real life with our body, car, cooker, as well as
with aircraft, technological processes etc. We try to control all
these dynamical systems Smooth dynamical systems are governed by
differential equations. In this book we deal only with finite
dimensional systems: they are governed by ordi nary differential
equations on finite dimensional smooth manifolds. A control system
for us is thus a family of ordinary differential equations. The
family is parametrized by control parameters."
This text is an enhanced, English version of the Russian edition,
published in early 2021 and is appropriate for an introductory
course in geometric control theory. The concise presentation
provides an accessible treatment of the subject for advanced
undergraduate and graduate students in theoretical and applied
mathematics, as well as to experts in classic control theory for
whom geometric methods may be introduced. Theory is accompanied by
characteristic examples such as stopping a train, motion of mobile
robot, Euler elasticae, Dido's problem, and rolling of the sphere
on the plane. Quick foundations to some recent topics of interest
like control on Lie groups and sub-Riemannian geometry are
included. Prerequisites include only a basic knowledge of calculus,
linear algebra, and ODEs; preliminary knowledge of control theory
is not assumed. The applications problems-oriented approach
discusses core subjects and encourages the reader to solve related
challenges independently. Highly-motivated readers can acquire
working knowledge of geometric control techniques and progress to
studying control problems and more comprehensive books on their
own. Selected sections provide exercises to assist in deeper
understanding of the material. Controllability and optimal control
problems are considered for nonlinear nonholonomic systems on
smooth manifolds, in particular, on Lie groups. For the
controllability problem, the following questions are considered:
controllability of linear systems, local controllability of
nonlinear systems, Nagano-Sussmann Orbit theorem, Rashevskii-Chow
theorem, Krener's theorem. For the optimal control problem,
Filippov's theorem is stated, invariant formulation of Pontryagin
maximum principle on manifolds is given, second-order optimality
conditions are discussed, and the sub-Riemannian problem is studied
in detail. Pontryagin maximum principle is proved for
sub-Riemannian problems, solution to the sub-Riemannian problems on
the Heisenberg group, the group of motions of the plane, and the
Engel group is described.
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