LMIs in Control/Click here to continue/Applications of Linear systems/LMI for Attitude Control of Nonrotating Missiles, Yaw/Roll Channel

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LMI for Attitude Control of Nonrotating Missles, Yaw/Roll Channel

Deriving the exact dynamic modeling of a missile is a very complicated procedure. Thus, a simplified model is used to model the missile dynamics. To do so, we consider a simplified attitude system model for the yaw/roll channel of the system. We aim to achieve a non-rotating motion of missiles. Note that the attitude control design for the yaw/roll channel and the pitch channel can be solved exactly in the same way except for different representing matrices of the system.


The System[edit | edit source]

The state-space representation for the yaw/roll channel can be written as follows:


where , , , and are the state variable, control input, output, and disturbance vectors, respectively. The paprameters , , , , , , and stand for the attack angle, pitch angular velocity, the elevator deflection, the input actuator deflection, the overload on the side direction, the sideslip angle, and the yaw angular velocity, respectively.

The Data[edit | edit source]

In the aforementioned yaw/roll channel system, the matrices and are given as:

where

and

where and are the system parameters. Moreover, is the speed of the missle and , , and are the rotary inertia of the missle corresponding to the body coordinates.

The Optimization Problem[edit | edit source]

The optimization problem is to find a state feedback control law such that:

1. The closed-loop system:

is stable.

2. The norm of the transfer function:

is less than a positive scalar value, . Thus:

The LMI: LMI for non-rotating missle attitude control[edit | edit source]

Using Theorem 8.1 in [1], the problem can be equivalently expressed in the following form:

Conclusion:[edit | edit source]

As mentioned, the aim is to attenuate the disturbance on the performance of the missile. The parameter is the disturbance attenuation level. When the matrices and are determined in the optimization problem, the controller gain matrix can be computed by:

Implementation[edit | edit source]

A link to Matlab codes for this problem in the Github repository:

https://github.com/asalimil/LMI-for-Attitude-Control-Nonrotating-Missle-Yaw-Roll-Channel

Related LMIs[edit | edit source]

LMI for Attitude Control of Nonrotating Missles, Pitch Channel

External Links[edit | edit source]

  • [1] - LMI in Control Systems Analysis, Design and Applications

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