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Synthetic parametric model: Difference between revisions

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Ionita (talk | contribs)
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<math> A = T\widehat{A}T^*, \quad B = T\widehat{B}, \quad C = \widehat{C}T^*, \quad D = 0,</math>
<math> A = T\widehat{A}T^*, \quad B = T\widehat{B}, \quad C = \widehat{C}T^*, \quad D = 0,</math>


with the matrix <math> T </math> defined using <math> 2\times 2 </math> diagonal blocks.
with
 
<math> T = \left[\begin{array}{ccc} T_0 & & \\ & \ddots & \\ & & T_0 \end{array}\right] </math>,
for <math>T_0 = \frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}\left[\begin{array}{cc} 1 & -j\\ 1 & j \end{array}\right]</math>.


== Example ==
== Example ==

Revision as of 11:18, 28 November 2011

Introduction

On this page you will find a purely synthetic parametric model. The goal is to have a simple parametric model which one can use to experiment with different system orders, parameter values etc.

System description

The parameter ε scales the real part of the system poles, that is, pk=εak+jbk. If the system is in pole-residue form, then

H(s)=i=1nrispi=i=1nris(εai+jbi),

which has the state-space realisation

A^=ε[a1an]+[jb1jbn]=εA^ε+A^0,

B^=[1,,1]T,C^=[r1,,rn],D=0.

Notice that the system matrices have complex entries.

For simplicity, assume that n is even, n=2k, and that all system poles are complex and ordered in complex conjugate pairs, i.e.

p1=εa1+jb1,p2=εa1jb1,,pn1=εak+jbk,pn=εakjbk.

Which also implies that the residues form complex conjugate pairs r1,r¯1,,rk,r¯k.

Then a realization with matrices having real entries is given by

A=TA^T*,B=TB^,C=C^T*,D=0,

with T=[T0T0], for T0=12[1j1j].

Example