A geometrical interpretation of the Routh test
DOI10.1016/0016-0032(88)90003-8zbMath0671.93049OpenAlexW1993312608MaRDI QIDQ1119529
Umberto Viaro, Gian Antonio Mian, Antonio Lepschy
Publication date: 1988
Published in: Journal of the Franklin Institute (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/0016-0032(88)90003-8
root locus techniquecontinuous-timeadditive polynomial decompositionsgeometrical proof of the classical Routh testpolynomial zero clustering
Discrete-time control/observation systems (93C55) Input-output approaches in control theory (93D25) Zeros of polynomials, rational functions, and other analytic functions of one complex variable (e.g., zeros of functions with bounded Dirichlet integral) (30C15)
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Cites Work
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- Direct bilinear Routh stability criteria for discrete systems
- Padé techniques for model reduction in linear system theory: a survey
- System approximation by matching the impulse response energies
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- Invariance of the strict Hurwitz property for polynomials with perturbed coefficients
- A new general Routh-like algorithm to determine the number of RHP roots of a real or complex polynomial
- Stability preservation and computational aspects of a newly proposed reduction method
- Routh-Hurwitz test under vanishing leading array elements
- Routh’s Algorithm: A Centennial Survey
- A note on the Routh-Hurwitz criterion
- The negative Routh test and its application to the cases of vanishing leading elements and imaginary roots
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