Koopman-based lifting techniques for nonlinear systems identification
This work provides a new parametric identification technique for nonlinear systems that is robust to low sampling rates, benefiting control and dynamical systems applications.
The paper develops a novel lifting technique for nonlinear system identification using the Koopman operator framework, enabling linear methods for nonlinear systems without requiring time derivatives. The proposed methods accurately reconstruct vector fields for unstable, chaotic, and input-driven systems, with theoretical convergence guarantees.
We develop a novel lifting technique for nonlinear system identification based on the framework of the Koopman operator. The key idea is to identify the linear (infinitedimensional) Koopman operator in the lifted space of observables, instead of identifying the nonlinear system in the state space, a process which results in a linear method for nonlinear systems identification. The proposed lifting technique is an indirect method that does not require to compute time derivatives and is therefore well-suited to low-sampling rate datasets. Considering different finite-dimensional subspaces to approximate and identify the Koopman operator, we propose two numerical schemes: the main method and the dual method. The main method is a parametric identification technique that can accurately reconstruct the vector field of a broad class of systems (including unstable, chaotic, and system with inputs). The dual method provides estimates of the vector field at the data points and is well-suited to identify high-dimensional systems with small datasets. The present paper describes the two methods, provide theoretical convergence results, and illustrate the lifting techniques with several examples.