Preliminary Evaluation and Comparison of Atmospheric Turbulence Rejection Performance for Infinite and Receding Horizon Control in Adaptive Optics Systems

被引:0
|
作者
Konnik, Mikhail V. [1 ]
De Dona, Jose [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Newcastle, Fac Engn & Built Environm, Callaghan, NSW 2308, Australia
来源
ADAPTIVE OPTICS SYSTEMS IV | 2014年 / 9148卷
关键词
constrained control; receding horizon control; quadratic programming;
D O I
10.1117/12.2055370
中图分类号
TM [电工技术]; TN [电子技术、通信技术];
学科分类号
0808 ; 0809 ;
摘要
Model-based optimal control such as Linear Quadratic Gaussian (LQG) control has been attracting considerable attention for adaptive optics systems. The ability of LQG to handle the complex dynamics of deformable mirrors and its relatively simple implementation makes LQG attractive for large adaptive optics systems. However, LQG has its own share of drawbacks, such as suboptimal handling of constraints on actuators movements and possible numerical problems in case of fast sampling rate discretisation of the corresponding matrices. Unlike LQG, the Receding Horizon Control (RHC) technique provides control signals for a deformable mirror that are optimal within the prescribed constraints. This is achieved by reformulating the control problem as an online optimisation problem that is solved at each sampling instance. In the unconstrained case, RHC produces the same control signals as LQG. However, when the control signals reach the constraints of actuator's allowable movement in a deformable mirror, RHC finds the control signals that are optimal within those constraints, rather than just clipping the unconstrained optimum as commonly done in LQG control. The article discusses the consequences of high-gain LQG control operation in the case when the constraints on the actuator's movement are reached. It is shown that clipping / saturating the control signals is not only suboptimal, but may be hazardous for the surface of a deformable mirror. The results of numerical simulations indicate that high-gain LQG control can lead to abrupt changes and spikes in the control signal when saturation occurs. The article further discusses a possible link between high-gain LQG and the waffle mode in the closed-loop operation of astronomical adaptive optics systems. Performance evaluation of Receding Horizon Control in terms of atmospheric disturbance rejection and a comparison with Linear Quadratic Gaussian control are performed. The results of the numerical simulations suggest that the disturbance rejection performance in the unconstrained case is the same for LQG and RHC, while RHC clearly outperforms the saturated LQG control in terms of atmospheric turbulence rejection. More importantly, RHC can be used in high-gain mode, unlike LQG, providing better atmospheric disturbance rejection in the constrained case.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] TURBULENCE-INDUCED ADAPTIVE-OPTICS PERFORMANCE DEGRADATION - EVALUATION IN THE TIME DOMAIN
    TYLER, GA
    JOURNAL OF THE OPTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA A-OPTICS IMAGE SCIENCE AND VISION, 1984, 1 (03): : 251 - 262
  • [32] Mitigation of atmospheric turbulence on up and downlink optical communication systems using receiver diversity and adaptive optics
    Ata, Yalcin
    Gokce, Muhsin Caner
    Baykal, Yahya
    OPTICAL AND QUANTUM ELECTRONICS, 2022, 54 (10)
  • [33] Mitigation of atmospheric turbulence on up and downlink optical communication systems using receiver diversity and adaptive optics
    Yalçın Ata
    Muhsin Caner Gökçe
    Yahya Baykal
    Optical and Quantum Electronics, 2022, 54
  • [34] Atmospheric turbulence characterization with the Keck adaptive optics systems.: I.: Open-loop data
    Schöck, M
    Le Mignant, D
    Chanan, GA
    Wizinowich, PL
    van Dam, MA
    APPLIED OPTICS, 2003, 42 (19) : 3705 - 3720
  • [35] Adaptive Dynamic Programming for Discrete-time Systems with Infinite Horizon and ε-error Bound in the Performance Cost
    Liu, Derong
    Jin, Ning
    IJCNN: 2009 INTERNATIONAL JOINT CONFERENCE ON NEURAL NETWORKS, VOLS 1- 6, 2009, : 710 - +
  • [36] Robust model predictive control for continuous nonlinear systems with the quasi-infinite adaptive horizon algorithm
    Zhang, Chuanxin
    Wang, Shengbo
    Cao, Yuting
    Zhu, Song
    Guo, Zhenyuan
    Wen, Shiping
    JOURNAL OF THE FRANKLIN INSTITUTE, 2024, 361 (02) : 748 - 763
  • [37] Decentralized Control of Switched Systems With Receding Horizon Modal Information and Path-Dependent Performance Specifications: Theory and an Application
    Jansch-Porto, Joao Paulo
    Dullerud, Geir E.
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON CONTROL SYSTEMS TECHNOLOGY, 2022, 30 (02) : 535 - 546
  • [38] Evaluation of a Multi-rate Predictive Control Strategy for Adaptive Optics Systems
    Cranney, Jesse
    De Dona, Jose
    Rigaut, Francois
    Korkiakoski, Visa
    2019 AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND CONTROL CONFERENCE (ANZCC), 2019, : 128 - 132
  • [39] Preliminary results from the Stereo-SCIDAR at the VLT Observatory: extraction of reference atmospheric turbulence profiles for E-ELT adaptive optics instrument performance simulations
    Sarazin, Marc S.
    Osborn, James
    Chacon-Oelckers, Arlette
    Derie, Frederic J.
    Le Louarn, Miska
    Milli, Julien
    Navarrete, Julio
    Wilson, Richard R. W.
    OPTICS IN ATMOSPHERIC PROPAGATION AND ADAPTIVE SYSTEMS XX, 2017, 10425
  • [40] Performance Robustness Comparison of Active Disturbance Rejection Control and Adaptive Backstepping Sliding Mode Control
    Kang, Ying
    Li, Donghai
    Lao, Dazhong
    ASIASIM 2012, PT II, 2012, 324 : 275 - +