Relations between heat capacities

From formulasearchengine
Revision as of 20:17, 30 October 2013 by en>Vaughan Pratt (Wikipedia's definition of "quasistatic" is strictly weaker than "reversible" and does not entail the equality in this statement of the 2nd Law)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

In stability theory, hyperstability is a property of a system that requires the state vector to remain bounded if the inputs are restricted to belonging to a subset of the set of all possible inputs.[1]

Definition:[2] A system is hyperstable if there are two constants such that any state trajectory of the system satisfies the inequality:

References

  1. Brian D. O Anderson, "A Simplified Viewpoint of Hyperstability", IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, June 1968
  2. Zinober, Deterministic control of uncertain systems, 1990

See also


Template:Mathapplied-stub