In control theory, a Kalman decomposition provides a mathematical means to convert a representation of any linear time-invariant (LTI) control system to a form in which the system can be decomposed into a standard form which makes clear the observable and controllable components of the system. This decomposition results in the system being presented with a more illuminating structure, making it easier to draw conclusions on the system's reachable and observable subspaces.

Definition edit

Consider the continuous-time LTI control system

 ,
 ,

or the discrete-time LTI control system

 ,
 .

The Kalman decomposition is defined as the realization of this system obtained by transforming the original matrices as follows:

 ,
 ,
 ,
 ,

where   is the coordinate transformation matrix defined as

 ,

and whose submatrices are

  •   : a matrix whose columns span the subspace of states which are both reachable and unobservable.
  •   : chosen so that the columns of   are a basis for the reachable subspace.
  •   : chosen so that the columns of   are a basis for the unobservable subspace.
  •   : chosen so that   is invertible.

It can be observed that some of these matrices may have dimension zero. For example, if the system is both observable and controllable, then  , making the other matrices zero dimension.

Consequences edit

By using results from controllability and observability, it can be shown that the transformed system   has matrices in the following form:

 
 
 
 

This leads to the conclusion that

  • The subsystem   is both reachable and observable.
  • The subsystem   is reachable.
  • The subsystem   is observable.

Variants edit

A Kalman decomposition also exists for linear dynamical quantum systems. Unlike classical dynamical systems, the coordinate transformation used in this variant requires to be in a specific class of transformations due to the physical laws of quantum mechanics.[1]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Zhang, Guofeng; Grivopoulos, Symeon; Petersen, Ian R.; Gough, John E. (February 2018). "The Kalman Decomposition for Linear Quantum Systems". IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control. 63 (2): 331–346. doi:10.1109/TAC.2017.2713343. hdl:10397/77565. ISSN 1558-2523. S2CID 10544143.

External links edit