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Flatness (systems theory)

Flatness in systems theory is a system property that extends the notion of controllability from linear systems to nonlinear dynamical systems. A system that has the flatness property is called a flat system. Flat systems have a (fictitious) flat output, which can be used to explicitly express all states and inputs in terms of the flat output and a finite number of its derivatives.

Definition

A nonlinear system

is flat, if there exists an output

that satisfies the following conditions:

  • The signals are representable as functions of the states and inputs and a finite number of derivatives with respect to time : .
  • The states and inputs are representable as functions of the outputs and of its derivatives with respect to time .
  • The components of are differentially independent, that is, they satisfy no differential equation of the form , where is not the null function.

If these conditions are satisfied at least locally, then the (possibly fictitious) output is called flat output, and the system is flat.

Relation to controllability of linear systems

A linear system

with the same signal dimensions for as the nonlinear system is flat, if and only if it is controllable, hence both flatness and controllability are interchangeable terms.

Significance

The flatness property is useful for both the analysis of and controller synthesis for nonlinear dynamical systems. It is particularly advantageous for solving trajectory planning problems and asymptotical setpoint following control.

Literature

See also