ABSTRACT

This book covers crucial lacunae of the linear discrete-time time-invariant dynamical systems and introduces the reader to their treatment, while functioning under real, natural conditions, in forced regimes with arbitrary initial conditions. It provides novel theoretical tools necessary for the analysis and design of the systems operating in stated conditions. The text completely covers two well-known systems, IO and ISO, along with a new system, IIO. It discovers the concept of the full transfer function matrix F(z) in the z-complex domain, which incorporates the Z-transform of the system, input and another variable, vectors, all with arbitrary initial conditions. Consequently, it addresses the full system matrix P(z) and the full block diagram technique based on the use of F(z), which incorporates the Z-transform of the system, input and another variable, vectors, all with arbitrary initial conditions. The book explores the direct relationship between the system full transfer function matrix F(z) and the Lyapunov stability concept, definitions, and conditions, as well as with the BI stability concept, definitions, and conditions. The goal of the book is to unify the study and applications of all three classes of the linear discrete-time time-invariant system, for short systems.

part I|98 pages

Basic Topics

chapter 1|16 pages

Chapter 1: Introduction

chapter 3|56 pages

Chapter 3: System regimes

chapter 4|2 pages

Chapter 4: Transfer function matrix G (z)

part II|154 pages

Full Transfer Function Matrix F(z) and System Realization

chapter 5|2 pages

Chapter 5: Problem Statement

chapter 6|8 pages

Chapter 6: Nondegenerate matrices

chapter 7|17 pages

Chapter 7: Definition of F(z)

chapter 8|45 pages

Chapter 8: Determination of F(z)

chapter 9|15 pages

Chapter 9: Full block diagram algebra

chapter 10|16 pages

Chapter 10: Physical meaning of F(z)

chapter 11|18 pages

Chapter 11: System matrix and equivalence

chapter 12|28 pages

Chapter 12: Realizations of (Fz)

part III|132 pages

Stability Study

chapter 13|87 pages

Chapter 13: Lyapunov stability

chapter 14|42 pages

Chapter 14: Bounded input stability

part IV|9 pages

Conclusion

chapter 15|3 pages

Chapter 15: Motivation for the book

chapter 16|2 pages

Chapter 16: Summary of the contributions

chapter 17|1 pages

Chapter 17: Future teaching and research