Parallel Optimization of Polynomials for Large-scale Problems in Stability and Control
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Publication:6283371
arXiv1702.05851MaRDI QIDQ6283371FDOQ6283371
Authors: Reza Kamyar
Publication date: 19 February 2017
Abstract: In this thesis, we focus on some of the NP-hard problems in control theory. Thanks to the converse Lyapunov theory, these problems can often be modeled as optimization over polynomials. To avoid the problem of intractability, we establish a trade off between accuracy and complexity. We develop a sequence of tractable optimization problems - in the form of LPs and SDPs - whose solutions converge to the exact solution of the NP-hard problem. However, the computational and memory complexity of these LPs and SDPs grow exponentially with the progress of the sequence - meaning that improving the accuracy of the solutions requires solving SDPs with tens of thousands of decision variables and constraints. Setting up and solving such problems is a significant challenge. The existing optimization algorithms and software are only designed to use desktop computers or small cluster computers - machines which do not have sufficient memory for solving such large SDPs. This in fact is the reason we seek parallel algorithms for setting-up and solving large SDPs on supercomputers. We propose parallel algorithms for stability analysis of two classes of systems: 1) Linear systems with a large number of uncertain parameters; 2) Nonlinear systems defined by polynomial vector fields. First, we develop a distributed parallel algorithm which applies Polya's and Handelman's theorems to some variants of parameter-dependent Lyapunov inequalities with parameters defined over the simplex. The result is a sequence of SDPs which possess a block-diagonal structure. We then develop a parallel SDP solver which exploits this structure to map the computation, memory and communication to a distributed parallel environment. Numerical tests on a supercomputer demonstrate the ability of the algorithm to efficiently utilize hundreds and potentially thousands of processors and analyze systems with 100+ dimensional state-space.
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