Sheaf-theoretic framework for optimal network control (2012.00120v1)
Abstract: In this paper, we use tools from sheaf theory to model and analyze optimal network control problems and their associated discrete relaxations. We consider a general problem setting in which pieces of equipment and their causal relations are represented as a directed network, and the state of this equipment evolves over time according to known dynamics and the presence or absence of control actions. First, we provide a brief introduction to key concepts in the theory of sheaves on partial orders. This foundation is used to construct a series of sheaves that build upon each other to model the problem of optimal control, culminating in a result that proves that solving our optimal control problem is equivalent to finding an assignment to a sheaf that has minimum consistency radius and restricts to a global section on a particular subsheaf. The framework thus built is applied to the specific case where a model is discretized to one in which the state and control variables are Boolean in nature, and we provide a general bound for the error incurred by such a discretization process. We conclude by presenting an application of these theoretical tools that demonstrates that this bound is improved when the system dynamics are affine.
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