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This paper investigates the stabilizability of a linear, discrete-time plant with a real-valued output when the controller, which may be nonlinear, receives observation data at a known rate. It is first shown that, under a finite horizon cost equal to the mth output moment, the problem reduces to quantizing the initial output. Asymptotic quantization theory is then applied to directly obtain the limiting coding and control scheme as the horizon approaches infinity. This is proven to minimize a particular infinite horizon cost, the value of which is derived. A necessary and sufficient condition then follows for there to exist a coding and control scheme with the specified data rate that takes the mth output moment to zero asymptotically with time. If the open-loop plant is finite-dimensional and time-invariant, this condition simplifies to an inequality involving the data rate and the unstable plant pole with greatest magnitude. Analagous results automatically hold for the related problem of state estimation with a finite data rate. © 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

Original publication

DOI

10.1016/S0167-6911(00)00037-2

Type

Journal article

Journal

Systems and Control Letters

Publication Date

15/09/2000

Volume

41

Pages

49 - 56