SYSYMay 11, 2018

Input-to-State Stability of Periodic Orbits of Systems with Impulse Effects via Poincaré Analysis

Princeton
arXiv:1712.0329128 citationsh-index: 27
AI Analysis

Provides a theoretical framework for analyzing robustness of periodic orbits in hybrid systems, relevant to control design for legged robots and other periodic systems.

This paper proves that input-to-state stability (ISS) of a periodic orbit in systems with impulse effects is equivalent to ISS of the corresponding fixed point of the forced Poincaré map, extending classical Poincaré analysis to robustness under external excitation.

In this paper we investigate the relation between robustness of periodic orbits exhibited by systems with impulse effects and robustness of their corresponding Poincaré maps. In particular, we prove that input-to-state stability (ISS) of a periodic orbit under external excitation in both continuous and discrete time is equivalent to ISS of the corresponding 0-input fixed point of the associated \emph{forced} Poincaré map. This result extends the classical Poincaré analysis for asymptotic stability of periodic solutions to establish orbital input-to-state stability of such solutions under external excitation. In our proof, we define the forced Poincaré map, and use it to construct ISS estimates for the periodic orbit in terms of ISS estimates of this map under mild assumptions on the input signals. As a consequence of the availability of these estimates, the equivalence between exponential stability (ES) of the fixed point of the 0-input (unforced) Poincaré map and ES of the corresponding orbit is recovered. The results can be applied naturally to study the robustness of periodic orbits of continuous-time systems as well. Although our motivation for extending classical Poincaré analysis to address ISS stems from the need to design robust controllers for limit-cycle walking and running robots, the results are applicable to a much broader class of systems that exhibit periodic solutions.

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