Search
Home  |  About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Authors  |  Orders  |  Email Alerts  |  E-Catalogues  |  Exhibitions  |  Journals  |  E-books |  Blog 
  BOOKS BY SUBJECT
  Architecture and Building
Management

Asian Studies
Business and Management
Chemistry
Computer Science
Economics and Finance
Engineering
Environmental Science
General Interest
History of Science
Life Sciences
Materials Science
Mathematics
Medicine and Healthcare
Nanotechnology and
Nanoscience

Nonlinear Science
Physics
Popular Science
Social Sciences
New Titles
New Reviews
Bestsellers
Editor's Choice
 
Bookmark and Share

A MATHEMATICAL INTRODUCTION TO CONTROL THEORY

by Shlomo Engelberg (Jerusalem College of Technology, Israel)

Table of Contents (151k)
Preface (154k)
Chapter 1: Mathematical Preliminaries (722k)

Striking a careful balance between mathematical rigor and engineering-oriented applications, this textbook aims to maximize the readers' understanding of both the mathematical and engineering aspects of control theory.

The bedrock elements of classical control theory are comprehensively covered: the Routh-Hurwitz theorem and applications, Nyquist diagrams, Bode plots, root locus plots, the design of controllers (phase-lag, phase-lead, lag-lead, and PID), and three further advanced topics: non-linear control, modern control and discrete-time control.

A Mathematical Introduction to Control Theory will be an invaluable book for junior and senior level university students in engineering, particularly electrical engineering. Students with a good knowledge of algebra and complex variables will also find many interesting applications in this volume.

 
Contents:
  • Mathematical Preliminaries
  • Transfer Functions
  • Feedback — An Introduction
  • The Routh–Hurwitz Criterion
  • The Principle of the Argument and Its Consequences
  • The Root Locus Diagram
  • Compensation
  • Some Nonlinear Control Theory
  • An Introduction to Modern Control
  • Control of Hybrid Systems
  • Answers to Selected Exercises
 
Readership: Undergraduate and graduate students in engineering, especially electrical engineering, and students in applied mathematics programs.
 
“This book has a sound mathematical background — the mathematical statements are given with proofs. The prerequisities of the textbook are a course in complex analysis and basic elements of linear algebra and ordinary differential equations.”
Zentralblatt MATH
 
368pp    Pub. date: Jun 2005  
ISBN:   978-1-86094-570-0
1-86094-570-8
   US$113 / £75

 


 
 

Copyright © 2012 Imperial College Press Co. All rights reserved.