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Hyperstability

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In stability theory, hyperstability is a property of a system that requires the state vector to remain bounded if the inputs are restricted to belonging to a subset of the set of all possible inputs.[1]

Definition:[2] A system is hyperstable if there are two constants such that any state trajectory of the system satisfies the inequality:

References

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  1. ^ Brian D. O Anderson, "A Simplified Viewpoint of Hyperstability", IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, June 1968
  2. ^ Zinober, Deterministic control of uncertain systems, 1990

See also

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