H-Systems von Elena De Santis | Observability, Diagnosability, and Predictability of Hybrid Dynamical Systems | ISBN 9783031204494

H-Systems

Observability, Diagnosability, and Predictability of Hybrid Dynamical Systems

von Elena De Santis und Maria Domenica Di Benedetto
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinElena De Santis
Autor / AutorinMaria Domenica Di Benedetto
Buchcover H-Systems | Elena De Santis | EAN 9783031204494 | ISBN 3-031-20449-2 | ISBN 978-3-031-20449-4

“This book serves as a valuable reference for graduate students, post-doctoral students, and researchers keen on exploring observability properties of hybrid systems, their analysis, and verification.” (Qi Lu, zbMATH 1558.93001, 2025)

“This book is a significant addition to the hybrid systems' literature, offering valuable insights for those interested in state estimation and fault detection in systems that integrate continuous and discrete dynamics.” (Rodrigo Aldana-López, Mathematical Reviews, June, 2025)

H-Systems

Observability, Diagnosability, and Predictability of Hybrid Dynamical Systems

von Elena De Santis und Maria Domenica Di Benedetto
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinElena De Santis
Autor / AutorinMaria Domenica Di Benedetto

This book focuses on the observability of hybrid systems. It enables the reader to determine whether and how a hybrid system’s state can be reconstructed from sometimes necessarily partial information. By explaining how available measurements can be used to deduce past and future behaviours of a system, the authors extend this study of observability to embrace the properties of diagnosability and predictability.

H-systems shows how continuous and discrete dynamics and their interaction affect the observability of this general class of hybrid systems and demonstrates that hybrid characteristics are not simply generalizations of well-known aspects of traditional dynamics. The authors identify conditions for state reconstruction, prediction and diagnosis of the occurrence of possibly faulty states. The formal approach to proving those properties for hybrid systems is accompanied by simple illustrative examples. For readers who are interested in the use of state estimation for controller design, the book also provides design methods for hybrid state observers and covers their application in some industrial cases.

The book’s tutorial approach to the various forms of observability of hybrid systems helps to make H-systems of interest to academic researchers and graduate students working in control and to practitioners using control in an industrial environment.