Control Theoretic Splines: Optimal Control, Statistics, and Path Planning
By (Author) Magnus Egerstedt
By (author) Clyde Martin
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
9th March 2010
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
511.42
Hardback
232
Width 152mm, Height 235mm
454g
Splines, both interpolatory and smoothing, have a long and rich history that has largely been application driven. This book unifies these constructions in a comprehensive and accessible way, drawing from the latest methods and applications to show how they arise naturally in the theory of linear control systems. Magnus Egerstedt and Clyde Martin are leading innovators in the use of control theoretic splines to bring together many diverse applications within a common framework. In this book, they begin with a series of problems ranging from path planning to statistics to approximation. Using the tools of optimization over vector spaces, Egerstedt and Martin demonstrate how all of these problems are part of the same general mathematical framework, and how they are all, to a certain degree, a consequence of the optimization problem of finding the shortest distance from a point to an affine subspace in a Hilbert space. They cover periodic splines, monotone splines, and splines with inequality constraints, and explain how any finite number of linear constraints can be added. This book reveals how the many natural connections between control theory, numerical analysis, and statistics can be used to generate powerful mathematical and analytical tools. This book is an excellent resource for students and professionals in control theory, robotics, engineering, computer graphics, econometrics, and any area that requires the construction of curves based on sets of raw data.
"[T]he book presents an excellent treatment of the topic of control-theoretic splines. It showcases effective and transparent use of optimization technique in function space sellings and of optimal control techniques to problems in the domain of approximation theory."--Ilya Kolmanovsky, Mathematical Reviews
Magnus Egerstedt is associate professor of electrical and computer engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology. Clyde Martin is the P. W. Horn Professor of Mathematics and Statistics at Texas Tech University.