Standard versus strict bounded real lemma with infinite-dimensional state space. I: The state-space-similarity approach

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Publication:4685149

DOI10.7900/JOT.2017SEP28.2175zbMATH Open1449.47034arXiv1804.08507OpenAlexW2963425634WikidataQ124798892 ScholiaQ124798892MaRDI QIDQ4685149FDOQ4685149


Authors: Joseph A. Ball, Gilbert J. Groenewald, Sanne ter Horst Edit this on Wikidata


Publication date: 5 October 2018

Published in: Journal of Operator Theory (Search for Journal in Brave)

Abstract: The Bounded Real Lemma, i.e., the state-space linear matrix inequality characterization (referred to as Kalman-Yakubovich-Popov or KYP inequality) of when an input/state/output linear system satisfies a dissipation inequality, has recently been studied for infinite-dimensional discrete-time systems in a number of different settings: with or without stability assumptions, with or without controllability/observability assumptions, with or without strict inequalities. In these various settings, sometimes unbounded solutions of the KYP inequality are required while in other instances bounded solutions suffice. In a series of reports we show how these diverse results can be reconciled and unified. This first instalment focusses on the state-space-similarity approach to the bounded real lemma. We shall show how these results can be seen as corollaries of a new State-Space-Similarity theorem for infinite-dimensional linear systems.


Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1804.08507




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