EE 5307 -
LINEAR SYSTEMS ENGINEERING
Updated: Saturday, August 02, 2008 by F.L. Lewis
This
is a UTA Web-Based Course. The internet
URL is http://arri.uta.edu/acs
Related
webpages:
Systems
and Controls Thrust Area
Catalog
Information: Topics include state-space description
of dynamic systems, analysis and design of linear systems, similarity
transformation, state feedback, state observers, and matrix characterization of
multivariable systems.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of instructor
Course Objectives:
To provide
Topics Covered: see separate schedule.
Class hours: TTh 3:30-4:50pm, room 112 Nedderman Hall (Eng. II).
Instructor: F.L. Lewis, tel: 272-5972, office: ARRI room 215 (off campus), lewis@uta.edu
Office hours: before class- by request only
Homework Grader: Kyriakos Vamvoudakis, kyriakos@arri.uta.edu
Office hours:
Texts:
1) B. Friedland
“Control System Design”
2) Student Edition of MATLAB
Grading:
Homework-- 25%
Exam 1-- (1 sheet of notes both sides) 25%
Exam 2-- (2 sheets of notes both sides) 25%
Final 25%
Attendance is not mandatory. If you skip classes, you will find the homework and exams more difficult. Due to the pace of the lectures, copying someone else's notes may be an unreliable way of making up an absence. You are responsible for all material covered in class regardless of absences.
You will need to use MATLAB. MATLAB is installed on the ACS network. Using the Student Edition of MATLAB you can install it on your own PC or MAC.
Check the grading of the exams thoroughly. You will have one week after the exam to see me for regrading. After this period, the grade is final.
Questions during class are strongly encouraged. The worst thing I can do is move too slowly and bore you. The next worst thing I can do is move too quickly and confuse you. If either of these occurs, it is your responsibility to speak up. You are paying for an education, and if the material is not presented clearly with confusion being eliminated shortly after it sets in you are not getting what you contracted for. On the other hand, if I never confuse you I am being unduly conservative and hence not conscientious. There is a very fine balance here, with you as student and me as instructor each having very definite responsibilities for keeping open all channels of communication. It is extremely difficult to teach a course without some sort of real-time feedback.
Some philosophy. I have an attitude toward learning which is based very heavily on independence and self-reliance; it can be summed up in the statement
"Knowledge cannot be given, but comes only with great personal
sacrifice and effort."
It is my job to make knowledge available to you and show you one attitude toward it based on my experience in the area. It is your job to make it a part of yourself and so your own personal possession.
Relation to Program Objectives. This is a first graduate course that provides prerequisite knowledge in linear systems engineering. Students will learn the basics of analysis and design for state-space systems, both continuous-time and discrete-time. System structure will be studied from the point of view of stability, controllability, observability, and block diagram realizations. State feedback design will be covered, introducing the basis of modern control theory, the Linear Quadratic Regulator. Observer and regulator design provides the basis for estimation theory.
As per University guidelines. See the Registrar’s Bulletin or the
University Calendar in the front part of the UTA catalog for drop dates.
Students will be asked to
complete instructor/course evaluation forms at the end of the semester.
If you require an
accommodation based on disability, I would like to meet with you in the privacy
of my office, during the first week of the semester, to make sure you are
properly accommodated.
The
As
a faculty member, I am required by law to provide “reasonable accommodation” to
It
is the philosophy of The University of Texas at
“Scholastic
dishonesty includes but is not limited to cheating, plagiarism, collusion, the submission for credit of any work or materials that are
attributable in whole or in part to another person, taking an examination for
another person, any act designed to give unfair advantage to a student or the
attempt to commit such acts.” (Regents’ Rules and Regulations, Part One, Chapter VI, Section 3,
Subsection 3.2, Subdivision 3.22).
ANY CHEATING WILL RESULT IN
SEVERE PENALTIES.
The
A period of five class days
prior to the first day of final examinations in the long sessions shall be
designated as Final Review Week. The purpose of this week is to allow
The