Phase transitions in distributed control systems with multiplicative noise
Nicolas Allegra, Bassam Bamieh, Partha P. Mitra, Cl\'ement Sire

TL;DR
This paper investigates phase transition phenomena in distributed control systems with multiplicative noise, revealing how performance sharply changes at certain noise thresholds depending on system dimensions and conservation laws.
Contribution
It introduces the analysis of phase transitions in network consensus problems under multiplicative noise, highlighting new phenomena not seen with additive noise.
Findings
Discontinuous performance change at noise thresholds depending on system dimension.
Zero stability margin for systems with spectral dimension less than two without conservation laws.
Qualitative features are likely generic, affecting robustness and communication in distributed control.
Abstract
Contemporary technological challenges often involve many degrees of freedom in a distributed or networked setting. Three aspects are notable: the variables are usually associated with the nodes of a graph with limited communication resources, hindering centralized control; the communication is subjected to noise; and the number of variables can be very large. These three aspects make tools and techniques from statistical physics particularly suitable for the performance analysis of such networked systems in the limit of many variables (analogous to the thermodynamic limit in statistical physics). Perhaps not surprisingly, phase-transition like phenomena appear in these systems, where a sharp change in performance can be observed with a smooth parameter variation, with the change becoming discontinuous or singular in the limit of infinite system size. In this paper we analyze the so…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Gene Regulatory Network Analysis · Distributed Control Multi-Agent Systems
