3,404 research outputs found
Robustness analysis of magnetic torquer controlled spacecraft attitude dynamics
This paper describes a systematic approach to the robustness analysis of linear periodically time-varying (LPTV) systems. The method uses the technique known as Lifting to transform the original time-varying uncertain system into linear fractional transformation (LFT) form. The stability and performance robustness of the system to structured parametric uncertainty can then be analysed non-conservatively using the structured singular value μ. The method is applied to analyse the stability robustness of an attitude control law for a spacecraft controlled by magnetic torquer bars, whose linearised dynamics can naturally be written in linear periodically time-varying form. The proposed method allows maximum allowable levels of uncertainty, as well as worst-case uncertainty combinations to be computed. The destabilising effect of these uncertain parameter combinations is verified in time-domain simulations
Designing heteroclinic and excitable networks in phase space using two populations of coupled cells
We give a constructive method for realizing an arbitrary directed graph (with
no one-cycles) as a heteroclinic or an excitable dynamic network in the phase
space of a system of coupled cells of two types. In each case, the system is
expressed as a system of first order differential equations. One of the cell
types (the -cells) interacts by mutual inhibition and classifies which
vertex (state) we are currently close to, while the other cell type (the
-cells) excites the -cells selectively and becomes active only when there
is a transition between vertices. We exhibit open sets of parameter values such
that these dynamical networks exist and demonstrate via numerical simulation
that they can be attractors for suitably chosen parameters
Sochi 2014 Winter Olympics and the Controversy of the Russian Propaganda Laws: is the IOC Buckling Under the Pressure of its own Incoherence in Thought?
The Sochi Winter Olympics were a triumph in the eyes of Russia and the International Olympic Committee (IOC). Yet, a controversy around the introduction of anti-propaganda laws in Russia that had been criticised for being discriminatory marred the efforts of the IOC to fulfil its self proclaimed aspiration of ‘encouraging the harmonious development of man’. This article discusses the controversy utilising a legally pluralist approach to sports governance, and providing a critical reading of the practices of neoliberal globalisation that marked the issue of sexuality at the Sochi games. The paper argues that the legal influence of the IOC on domestic and international legal norms is contradictory and inconsistent. This, when considered alongside the aspirations of the IOC is significantly problematic and demonstrates the importance of investigating the underlying power structures of this influential international governing body
Evaluation of stochastic effects on biomolecular networks using the generalised Nyquist stability criterion
Abstract—Stochastic differential equations are now commonly used to model biomolecular networks in systems biology, and much recent research has been devoted to the development of methods to analyse their stability properties. Stability analysis of such systems may be performed using the Laplace transform, which requires the calculation of the exponential
matrix involving time symbolically. However, the calculation of the symbolic exponential matrix is not feasible for problems of even moderate size, as the required computation time increases exponentially with the
matrix order. To address this issue, we present a novel method for approximating the Laplace transform which does not require the exponential matrix to be calculated explicitly. The calculation time associated with
the proposed method does not increase exponentially with the size of the system, and the approximation error is shown to be of the same order as existing methods. Using this approximation method, we show how a straightforward application of the generalized Nyquist stability criterion
provides necessary and sufficient conditions for the stability of stochastic biomolecular networks. The usefulness and computational efficiency of the proposed method is illustrated through its application to the problem of analysing a model for limit-cycle oscillations in cAMP during aggregation of Dictyostelium cells
Autoethnography and the Museum
The British Council in its first collaboration with the Museum of Macedonia, European University - R. of Macedonia and Fashion Weekend Skopje commissioned a residency and workshops which culminated in an exhibition of work at Skopje Fashion Week. The project looked to encourage a relationship between contemporary fashion and ethnographic dress pieces within the museum, and by placing contemporary fashion in the museum to create a cultural value and respect for it
The use of simulation in chemical process control learning and the development of PISim
PISim is a new piece of software for process control teaching and learning. The software allows control structures to be designed on a piping and instrumentation diagram and, as the structure is created, the software automatically spawns device mimics representing the real physical HMIs that operators would see. These can be placed on a control panel and a simulation of the process can be operated using the student’s control scheme. The use of PISim in an introductory control class at Strathclyde University is described and student feedback is presented
Time-delayed feedback control of unstable periodic orbits near a subcritical Hopf bifurcation
We show that Pyragas delayed feedback control can stabilize an unstable
periodic orbit (UPO) that arises from a generic subcritical Hopf bifurcation of
a stable equilibrium in an n-dimensional dynamical system. This extends results
of Fiedler et al. [PRL 98, 114101 (2007)], who demonstrated that such feedback
control can stabilize the UPO associated with a two-dimensional subcritical
Hopf normal form. Pyragas feedback requires an appropriate choice of a feedback
gain matrix for stabilization, as well as knowledge of the period of the
targeted UPO. We apply feedback in the directions tangent to the
two-dimensional center manifold. We parameterize the feedback gain by a modulus
and a phase angle, and give explicit formulae for choosing these two parameters
given the period of the UPO in a neighborhood of the bifurcation point. We
show, first heuristically, and then rigorously by a center manifold reduction
for delay differential equations, that the stabilization mechanism involves a
highly degenerate Hopf bifurcation problem that is induced by the time-delayed
feedback. When the feedback gain modulus reaches a threshold for stabilization,
both of the genericity assumptions associated with a two-dimensional Hopf
bifurcation are violated: the eigenvalues of the linearized problem do not
cross the imaginary axis as the bifurcation parameter is varied, and the real
part of the cubic coefficient of the normal form vanishes. Our analysis of this
degenerate bifurcation problem reveals two qualitatively distinct cases when
unfolded in a two-parameter plane. In each case, Pyragas-type feedback
successfully stabilizes the branch of small-amplitude UPOs in a neighborhood of
the original bifurcation point, provided that the phase angle satisfies a
certain restriction.Comment: 35 pages, 19 figure
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