Mobile Wireless Networked Controlled Systems: Control Issues
- π€ Speaker: Professor Anthony Tzes (University of Patras, Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering)
- π Date & Time: Thursday 17 September 2009, 14:00 - 15:00
- π Venue: Cambridge University Engineering Department, Lecture Room 11
Abstract
Mobile Wireless Networked Controlled Systems (MoWiNCS) are time-varying spatially distributed systems in which between the controlled plant (actuator, process, and sensor) and the controller there is a shared limited bandwidth network. The network induced delay, packet losses and reordering of packets deteriorates the systemβs performance. In a similar manner as the communications OSI -stack, control engineers are mostly involved with the application layer where robust controllers are designed capable of handling the aforementioned QoS-issues. In the middleware layer, appropriate network reconfigurations relying on the commanded motion of mobile agents (robots) are provided while in the physical layer for Wireless NCS , the power control to ensure connectivity is of paramount importance. This talk will explore these issues through a series of examples and provide certain theoretical tools.
Series This talk is part of the CUED Control Group Seminars series.
Included in Lists
- All Talks (aka the CURE list)
- bld31
- Cambridge Centre for Data-Driven Discovery (C2D3)
- Cambridge talks
- Cambridge University Engineering Department, Lecture Room 11
- Cambridge University Engineering Department Talks
- Centre for Smart Infrastructure & Construction
- Chris Davis' list
- Computational Continuum Mechanics Group Seminars
- CUED Control Group Seminars
- Featured lists
- Information Engineering Division seminar list
- Interested Talks
- ndk22's list
- ob366-ai4er
- Probabilistic Systems, Information, and Inference Group Seminars
- rp587
- School of Technology
- Trust & Technology Initiative - interesting events
- yk449
Note: Ex-directory lists are not shown.
![[Talks.cam]](/static/images/talkslogosmall.gif)


Thursday 17 September 2009, 14:00-15:00