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Spectral radius minimization for optimal average consensus and output feedback stabilization
Authors:Yoonsoo Kim [Author Vitae]  Da-Wei Gu [Author Vitae]
Affiliation:a Department of Mechanical and Mechatronic Engineering, University of Stellenbosch, Private Bag X1, Matieland 7602, South Africa
b Department of Engineering, University of Leicester, Leicester, LE1 7RH, United Kingdom
Abstract:In this paper, we consider two problems which can be posed as spectral radius minimization problems. Firstly, we consider the fastest average agreement problem on multi-agent networks adopting a linear information exchange protocol. Mathematically, this problem can be cast as finding an optimalView the MathML source such that x(k+1)=Wx(k), View the MathML source, View the MathML source and WS(E). Here, View the MathML source is the value possessed by the agents at the kth time step, View the MathML source is an all-one vector and S(E) is the set of real matrices in View the MathML source with zeros at the same positions specified by a network graph G(V,E), where V is the set of agents and E is the set of communication links between agents. The optimal W is such that the spectral radius View the MathML source is minimized. To this end, we consider two numerical solution schemes: one using the qth-order spectral norm (2-norm) minimization (q-SNM) and the other gradient sampling (GS), inspired by the methods proposed in Burke, J., Lewis, A., & Overton, M. (2002). Two numerical methods for optimizing matrix stability. Linear Algebra and its Applications, 351-352, 117-145; Xiao, L., & Boyd, S. (2004). Fast linear iterations for distributed averaging. Systems & Control Letters, 53(1), 65-78]. In this context, we theoretically show that when E is symmetric, i.e. no information flow from the ith to the jth agent implies no information flow from the jth to the ith agent, the solution View the MathML source from the 1-SNM method can be chosen to be symmetric and View the MathML source is a local minimum of the function View the MathML source. Numerically, we show that the q-SNM method performs much better than the GS method when E is not symmetric. Secondly, we consider the famous static output feedback stabilization problem, which is considered to be a hard problem (some think NP-hard): for a given linear system (A,B,C), find a stabilizing control gain K such that all the real parts of the eigenvalues of A+BKC are strictly negative. In spite of its computational complexity, we show numerically that q-SNM successfully yields stabilizing controllers for several benchmark problems with little effort.
Keywords:Spectral radius  Distributed control  Communication networks  Output feedback
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