Matching Items (2)
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- All Subjects: Control Theory
- Creators: Bliss, Daniel W
Description
Modern measurement schemes for linear dynamical systems are typically designed so that different sensors can be scheduled to be used at each time step. To determine which sensors to use, various metrics have been suggested. One possible such metric is the observability of the system. Observability is a binary condition determining whether a finite number of measurements suffice to recover the initial state. However to employ observability for sensor scheduling, the binary definition needs to be expanded so that one can measure how observable a system is with a particular measurement scheme, i.e. one needs a metric of observability. Most methods utilizing an observability metric are about sensor selection and not for sensor scheduling. In this dissertation we present a new approach to utilize the observability for sensor scheduling by employing the condition number of the observability matrix as the metric and using column subset selection to create an algorithm to choose which sensors to use at each time step. To this end we use a rank revealing QR factorization algorithm to select sensors. Several numerical experiments are used to demonstrate the performance of the proposed scheme.
ContributorsIlkturk, Utku (Author) / Gelb, Anne (Thesis advisor) / Platte, Rodrigo (Thesis advisor) / Cochran, Douglas (Committee member) / Renaut, Rosemary (Committee member) / Armbruster, Dieter (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
Description
For the last 50 years, oscillator modeling in ranging systems has received considerable
attention. Many components in a navigation system, such as the master oscillator
driving the receiver system, as well the master oscillator in the transmitting system
contribute significantly to timing errors. Algorithms in the navigation processor must
be able to predict and compensate such errors to achieve a specified accuracy. While
much work has been done on the fundamentals of these problems, the thinking on said
problems has not progressed. On the hardware end, the designers of local oscillators
focus on synthesized frequency and loop noise bandwidth. This does nothing to
mitigate, or reduce frequency stability degradation in band. Similarly, there are not
systematic methods to accommodate phase and frequency anomalies such as clock
jumps. Phase locked loops are fundamentally control systems, and while control
theory has had significant advancement over the last 30 years, the design of timekeeping
sources has not advanced beyond classical control. On the software end,
single or two state oscillator models are typically embedded in a Kalman Filter to
alleviate time errors between the transmitter and receiver clock. Such models are
appropriate for short term time accuracy, but insufficient for long term time accuracy.
Additionally, flicker frequency noise may be present in oscillators, and it presents
mathematical modeling complications. This work proposes novel H∞ control methods
to address the shortcomings in the standard design of time-keeping phase locked loops.
Such methods allow the designer to address frequency stability degradation as well
as high phase/frequency dynamics. Additionally, finite-dimensional approximants of
flicker frequency noise that are more representative of the truth system than the
tradition Gauss Markov approach are derived. Last, to maintain timing accuracy in
a wide variety of operating environments, novel Banks of Adaptive Extended Kalman
Filters are used to address both stochastic and dynamic uncertainty.
attention. Many components in a navigation system, such as the master oscillator
driving the receiver system, as well the master oscillator in the transmitting system
contribute significantly to timing errors. Algorithms in the navigation processor must
be able to predict and compensate such errors to achieve a specified accuracy. While
much work has been done on the fundamentals of these problems, the thinking on said
problems has not progressed. On the hardware end, the designers of local oscillators
focus on synthesized frequency and loop noise bandwidth. This does nothing to
mitigate, or reduce frequency stability degradation in band. Similarly, there are not
systematic methods to accommodate phase and frequency anomalies such as clock
jumps. Phase locked loops are fundamentally control systems, and while control
theory has had significant advancement over the last 30 years, the design of timekeeping
sources has not advanced beyond classical control. On the software end,
single or two state oscillator models are typically embedded in a Kalman Filter to
alleviate time errors between the transmitter and receiver clock. Such models are
appropriate for short term time accuracy, but insufficient for long term time accuracy.
Additionally, flicker frequency noise may be present in oscillators, and it presents
mathematical modeling complications. This work proposes novel H∞ control methods
to address the shortcomings in the standard design of time-keeping phase locked loops.
Such methods allow the designer to address frequency stability degradation as well
as high phase/frequency dynamics. Additionally, finite-dimensional approximants of
flicker frequency noise that are more representative of the truth system than the
tradition Gauss Markov approach are derived. Last, to maintain timing accuracy in
a wide variety of operating environments, novel Banks of Adaptive Extended Kalman
Filters are used to address both stochastic and dynamic uncertainty.
ContributorsEchols, Justin A (Author) / Bliss, Daniel W (Thesis advisor) / Tsakalis, Konstantinos S (Committee member) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Mittelmann, Hans (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020