Wiley - Aircraft Control Allocation (2017 EN)

Discussion in 'Others' started by Kanka, Dec 9, 2016.

  1. Kanka

    Kanka Well-Known Member Loyal User

    Messages:
    16,037
    Likes Received:
    449
    Trophy Points:
    83
    [​IMG]

    Author: Wayne Durham, Kenneth A. Bordignon, Roger Beck
    Full Title: Aircraft Control Allocation
    Publisher: Wiley; 1 edition (January 17, 2017)
    Year: 2017
    ISBN-13: 9781118827796 (978-1-118-82779-6)
    ISBN-10: 1118827791
    Pages: 312
    Language: English
    Genre: Mechanical Engineering: Aeronautic & Aerospace
    File type: PDF (True, but nonnative Cover)
    Quality: 9/10
    Price: 111.20 €


    An authoritative work on aircraft control allocation by its pioneers

    Aircraft Control Allocation addresses the problem of allocating supposed redundant flight controls. It provides introductory material on flight dynamics and control to provide the context, and then describes in detail the geometry of the problem. The book includes a large section on solution methods, including 'Banks' method', a previously unpublished procedure. Generalized inverses are also discussed at length. There is an introductory section on linear programming solutions, as well as an extensive and comprehensive appendix dedicated to linear programming formulations and solutions. Discrete-time, or frame-wise allocation, is presented, including rate-limiting, nonlinear data, and preferred solutions.


    Key features:
    — Written by pioneers in the field of control allocation.
    — Comprehensive explanation and discussion of the major control allocation solution methods.
    — Extensive treatment of linear programming solutions to control allocation.
    — A companion web site contains the code of a MATLAB/Simulink flight simulation with modules that incorporate all of the major solution methods.
    — Includes examples based on actual aircraft.

    The book is a vital reference for researchers and practitioners working in aircraft control, as well as graduate students in aerospace engineering.
    -------------
     
    Last edited by a moderator: May 7, 2019