Title :
Discrete synchronization of hybrid systems
Author :
Tabuada, Paulo ; Pappas, George J.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Syst. Eng., Univ. of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA
Abstract :
Control theory is faced with new paradigms and challenges that fall beyond traditional problems. Nowadays applications tend to be distributed, and require partial synchronization among their various subsystems. We give initial steps towards discrete synchronization problems for systems which are compositions of several, possibly distributed, hybrid systems. Such problems arise frequently in the coordination of multi-agent systems, where each agent is modeled as a hybrid system. This results in control problems where the model is the composition of decoupled subsystems, but the specification is coupled across subsystems. A centralized solution to this problem requires computing the product hybrid system resulting in state explosion. We alternatively consider decentralized solutions to such discrete synchronization problems. Partially decentralized synchronization is achieved if each subsystem is allowed to communicate with the subsystems it needs to partially synchronize with. The required communication between agents is provided by modeling abstractions of the remaining agents. These abstractions. which are property-dependent, are then used to derive local controllers using global, but minimal, observations.
Keywords :
continuous time systems; control system synthesis; decentralised control; discrete systems; equivalence classes; multi-agent systems; synchronisation; temporal logic; discrete synchronization; distributed systems; hybrid systems; multi-agent systems; partially decentralized synchronization; state explosion; Aircraft; Centralized control; Explosions; Information analysis; Information technology; Large-scale systems; Power system modeling; Systems engineering and theory; Traffic control; Vehicles;
Conference_Titel :
Decision and Control, 2002, Proceedings of the 41st IEEE Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7516-5
DOI :
10.1109/CDC.2002.1184461