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The numerical values for the different variables are the following: | The numerical values for the different variables are the following: | ||
* the residues <math>r_i, i = 1,\ldots,k</math> are real and equally spaced in <math>[10^{-3},1]</math>, with <math>r_1 = 1]</math> and <math>r_k = 10^{-3}</math>. | |||
* <math>\mathrm a_i, i = 1,\ldots,k</math> linearly spaced between <math>[10^{-1},10^3]</math>, | |||
* <math>\mathrm b_i, i = 1,\ldots,k</math> linearly spaced between <math>[10,10^3]</math>, | |||
* <math>\varepsilon \in [1,20]</math>, | |||
Revision as of 13:01, 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 scales the real part of the system poles, that is, . For a system in pole-residue form
we can then write down the state-space realisation
Notice that the system matrices have complex entries.
For simplicity, assume that is even, , and that all system poles are complex and ordered in complex conjugate pairs, i.e.
which also implies that the residues form complex conjugate pairs
Then a realization with matrices having real entries is given by
with ,
for .
Numerical values
The numerical values for the different variables are the following:
- the residues are real and equally spaced in , with and .
- linearly spaced between ,
- linearly spaced between ,
- ,