Minimum information rate for observability of linear systems with stochastic time delay
From MaRDI portal
Publication:5742530
DOI10.1080/00207179.2017.1359675zbMath1414.93041OpenAlexW2739167091MaRDI QIDQ5742530
Publication date: 15 May 2019
Published in: International Journal of Control (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/00207179.2017.1359675
Discrete-time control/observation systems (93C55) Estimation and detection in stochastic control theory (93E10) Linear systems in control theory (93C05) Observability (93B07)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Stability analysis and stabilization of 2-D switched systems under arbitrary and restricted switchings
- Stability and reliable data reconstruction of uncertain dynamic systems over finite capacity channels
- State estimation and sliding mode control for semi-Markovian jump systems with mismatched uncertainties
- Internal stability of dynamic quantised control for stochastic linear plants
- The Necessity and Sufficiency of Anytime Capacity for Stabilization of a Linear System Over a Noisy Communication Link—Part I: Scalar Systems
- Systems with finite communication bandwidth constraints. II. Stabilization with limited information feedback
- Stabilization of linear systems with limited information
- Stabilizability of Stochastic Linear Systems with Finite Feedback Data Rates
- Control of Continuous-Time Linear Gaussian Systems Over Additive Gaussian Wireless Fading Channels: A Separation Principle
- Feedback Control in the Presence of Noisy Channels: “Bode-Like” Fundamental Limitations of Performance
- Robust Stabilization Over Communication Channels in the Presence of Unstructured Uncertainty
- Control Under Communication Constraints
- Stochastic Linear Control Over a Communication Channel
- Communication Constraints for Decentralized Stabilizability With Time-Invariant Policies
- Distributed Consensus With Limited Communication Data Rate
- Minimum Data Rate for Mean Square Stabilizability of Linear Systems With Markovian Packet Losses
- On the Effect of Stochastic Delay on Estimation
- Elements of Information Theory