optimal impulsive control
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

59
(FIVE YEARS 16)

H-INDEX

10
(FIVE YEARS 3)

Author(s):  
Giovanni Fusco ◽  
Monica Motta

AbstractIn this paper we consider an impulsive extension of an optimal control problem with unbounded controls, subject to endpoint and state constraints. We show that the existence of an extended-sense minimizer that is a normal extremal for a constrained Maximum Principle ensures that there is no gap between the infima of the original problem and of its extension. Furthermore, we translate such relation into verifiable sufficient conditions for normality in the form of constraint and endpoint qualifications. Links between existence of an infimum gap and normality in impulsive control have previously been explored for problems without state constraints. This paper establishes such links in the presence of state constraints and of an additional ordinary control, for locally Lipschitz continuous data.


Author(s):  
N. S. Maltugueva ◽  
◽  
N.I. Pogodaev ◽  
O.N. Samsonyuk ◽  
◽  
...  

In this paper, we consider an optimal impulsive control problem with intermediate state constraints. The peculiarity of the problem consists in a non-standard way of specifying of intermediate constraints. So the constraints must be satisfied for at least one selection of a set-valued solution to the impulsive control system. We prove a theorem for the existence of an optimal control and propose the reduction procedure that transforms the initial optimal control problem with intermediate constraints into a hybrid problem with control parameters. This hybrid problem gives an equivalent description of the optimal impulsive control problem. We discuss a numerical algorithm based on a direct collocation method and give a schema to the corresponding numerical calculations for a test example.


2020 ◽  
pp. 152-158
Author(s):  
Stepan Sorokin ◽  
Maxim Staritsyn

We propose and compare three numeric algorithms for optimal control of state-linear impulsive systems. The algorithms rely on the standard transformation of impulsive control problems through the discontinuous time rescaling, and the so-called “feedback”, direct and dual, maximum principles. The feedback maximum principles are variational necessary optimality conditions operating with feedback controls, which are designed through the usual constructions of the Pontryagin’s Maximum Principle (PMP); though these optimality conditions are formulated completely in the formalism of PMP, they essentially strengthen it. All the algorithms are non-local in the sense that they are aimed at improving non-optimal extrema of PMP (local minima), and, therefore, show the potential of global optimization.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document