Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданиях › статья › Рецензирование
Time-versus event-triggered consensus for a single-integrator multi-agent system. / Meister, D.; Aurzada, F.; Лифшиц, Михаил Анатольевич; Allgower, F.
в: Nonlinear Analysis: Hybrid Systems, Том 53, 101494, 01.08.2024.Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданиях › статья › Рецензирование
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Time-versus event-triggered consensus for a single-integrator multi-agent system
AU - Meister, D.
AU - Aurzada, F.
AU - Лифшиц, Михаил Анатольевич
AU - Allgower, F.
PY - 2024/8/1
Y1 - 2024/8/1
N2 - Event-triggered control has shown the potential for providing improved control performance at the same average sampling rate when compared to time-triggered control. While this observation motivates numerous event-triggered control schemes, proving it from a theoretical perspective has only been achieved for a limited number of settings. Inspired by existing performance analyses for the single-loop case, we provide a first fundamental performance comparison of time- and event-triggered control in a multi-agent consensus setting. For this purpose, we consider undirected connected network topologies without communication delays, a level-triggering rule for event-triggered control, and the long-term average of the quadratic deviation from consensus as a performance measure. The main finding of our analysis is that time-triggered control provably outperforms event-triggered control beyond a certain number of agents in our particular setting. We thereby provide an illustrative distributed problem setup in which event-triggered control results in a performance disadvantage when compared to time-triggered control in the case of large networks. Moreover, we derive the asymptotic order of the performance measure under both triggering schemes which gives more insights into the cost relationship for large numbers of agents. Thus, by presenting an analysis for a particular setup, this work points out that transferring an event-triggering scheme from the single-loop to the multi-agent setting can lead to a loss of the often presumed superiority of event-triggered control over time-triggered control. In particular, the design of performant decentralized event-triggering schemes can therefore pose additional challenges when compared to the analogue single-loop case.
AB - Event-triggered control has shown the potential for providing improved control performance at the same average sampling rate when compared to time-triggered control. While this observation motivates numerous event-triggered control schemes, proving it from a theoretical perspective has only been achieved for a limited number of settings. Inspired by existing performance analyses for the single-loop case, we provide a first fundamental performance comparison of time- and event-triggered control in a multi-agent consensus setting. For this purpose, we consider undirected connected network topologies without communication delays, a level-triggering rule for event-triggered control, and the long-term average of the quadratic deviation from consensus as a performance measure. The main finding of our analysis is that time-triggered control provably outperforms event-triggered control beyond a certain number of agents in our particular setting. We thereby provide an illustrative distributed problem setup in which event-triggered control results in a performance disadvantage when compared to time-triggered control in the case of large networks. Moreover, we derive the asymptotic order of the performance measure under both triggering schemes which gives more insights into the cost relationship for large numbers of agents. Thus, by presenting an analysis for a particular setup, this work points out that transferring an event-triggering scheme from the single-loop to the multi-agent setting can lead to a loss of the often presumed superiority of event-triggered control over time-triggered control. In particular, the design of performant decentralized event-triggering schemes can therefore pose additional challenges when compared to the analogue single-loop case.
KW - управление большими системами
KW - Event-triggered control
KW - Multi-agent systems
KW - Networked control systems
KW - Sampled-data systems
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/36d3b7be-9f71-3424-a954-2de468299f9f/
U2 - 10.1016/j.nahs.2024.101494
DO - 10.1016/j.nahs.2024.101494
M3 - Article
VL - 53
JO - Nonlinear Analysis: Hybrid Systems
JF - Nonlinear Analysis: Hybrid Systems
SN - 1751-570X
M1 - 101494
ER -
ID: 126266945