Differential Correspondences and Control Theory
J.-F. Pommaret

TL;DR
This paper explores the use of differential correspondences and homological algebra to analyze control systems, emphasizing the importance of common differential extensions for parametrization and controllability in linear and nonlinear differential equations.
Contribution
It introduces the application of differential correspondences and non-commutative localization to control theory, providing new insights into system parametrization and controllability.
Findings
Revisits control theory through differential algebra and correspondences.
Highlights the role of differential modules and homological algebra in system analysis.
Uses the Spencer operator to analyze control systems as D-modules.
Abstract
When a differential field having commuting derivations is given together with two finitely generated differential extensions and of , an important problem in differential algebra is to exhibit a common differential extension in order to define the new differential extensions and the smallest differential field containing both and . Such a result allows to generalize the use of complex numbers in classical algebra. Having now two finitely generated differential modules and over the non-commutative ring ring of differential operators with coefficients in , we may similarly look for a differential module containing both and in order to define and . This is {\it exactly} the situation met in linear or non-linear OD or PD control theory by selecting the inputs and the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Topics in Algebra · Algebraic structures and combinatorial models · Polynomial and algebraic computation
