Breaking Dense Structures: Proving Stability of Densely Structured Hybrid Systems
Eike M\"ohlmann (Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg), Oliver, Theel (Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg)

TL;DR
This paper improves a graph-based decomposition technique for hybrid systems by relaxing the graph structure to handle super-dense switching, enhancing efficiency and applicability for complex cyber-physical systems.
Contribution
It introduces a relaxation method that reduces graph connectivity, enabling more efficient and broader decomposition of densely structured hybrid systems.
Findings
Enhanced decomposition efficiency for complex hybrid systems
Broader applicability to densely connected graph structures
Improved stability analysis through local Lyapunov functions
Abstract
Abstraction and refinement is widely used in software development. Such techniques are valuable since they allow to handle even more complex systems. One key point is the ability to decompose a large system into subsystems, analyze those subsystems and deduce properties of the larger system. As cyber-physical systems tend to become more and more complex, such techniques become more appealing. In 2009, Oehlerking and Theel presented a (de-)composition technique for hybrid systems. This technique is graph-based and constructs a Lyapunov function for hybrid systems having a complex discrete state space. The technique consists of (1) decomposing the underlying graph of the hybrid system into subgraphs, (2) computing multiple local Lyapunov functions for the subgraphs, and finally (3) composing the local Lyapunov functions into a piecewise Lyapunov function. A Lyapunov function can serve…
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