Nonlinear Control of Mechanical Systems: A Lagrangian Perspective
Richard M. Murray
Annual Reviews in Control, v21, pp 31-45, 1997
1995 IFAC Symposium on Nonlinear Control Systems Design
Recent advances in geometric mechanics, motivated in large part by applications in
control theory, have introduced new tools for understanding and utilizing the structure
present in mechanical systems. In particular, the use of geometric methods for analyzing
Lagrangian systems with both symmetries and non-integrable (or nonholonomic) constraints
has led to a unified formulation of the dynamics that has important implications for a
wide class of mechanical control systems. This paper presents a survey of recent results
in this area, focusing on the relationships between geometric phases, controllability, and
curvature, and the role of trajectory generation in nonlinear controller synthesis.
Examples are drawn from robotics and flight control systems, with an emphasis on motion
control problems.
Preprint
(pdf, 252K, 12 pages)
Slides
from my conference talk (postcript, 12 pages (two slides/page), 791K compressed)
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Last modified: Tue Aug 30 07:42:22 2005