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The sub-Riemannian problem on group of motions of pseudo Euclidean plane is considered. From engineering perspective, this is the optimal control problem of a unicycle moving
on a hyperbolic plane (plane with constant negative curvature). The dynamical system
comprises real analytic left invariant vector field with 2-dimensional linear control vector -
the control variables being the translational and the angular velocity of the unicycle. The
sub-Riemannian optimal control problem seeks to determine optimal control input and the
corresponding optimal trajectory between the given initial and terminal states such that the
sub-Riemannian length on this trajectory is minimized.
At the onset we prove the controllability of the control distribution. We define the left
invariant Hamiltonian for the system under consideration and apply the Pontryagin’s Maximum Principle (PMP). We prove that the extremal trajectories in the abnormal case are not
strictly abnormal and the corresponding control vector is a constant i.e., identically zero. We
then consider the normal Hamiltonian system. Through suitable coordinate transformation,
we prove that the vertical subsystem is a double covering of a mathematical pendulum. This
fact allows us to introduce Jacobi elliptic functions for integration of the nonlinear state equations that would otherwise be analytically intractable. Using specific elliptic coordinates, we
calculate the extremal trajectories parametrized by Jacobi elliptic functions corresponding
to various energy levels of the pendulum describing the vertical subsystem. We gain further
insight into the nature of extremal trajectories through simulation and qualitative analysis.
As PMP gives only first order necessary optimality conditions, the extremal trajectories
resulting from the integration of normal Hamiltonian system are candidate optimal only.
Hence, second order optimality conditions are applied to eliminate the trajectories that
cease to be optimal at certain point. It is known that a normal extremal trajectory ceases
to be optimal either because it meets another candidate optimal trajectory at a point called
Maxwell point where both have equal sub-Riemannian length, or because there exists a point
called a conjugate point where a family of extremal trajectories has an envelope. We find
surfaces in the state space M containing all Maxwell points and obtain a description of the
Maxwell points in terms of roots of function forming these surfaces. Once the Maxwell sets
are calculated, an upper bound on the cut time (the time at which an extremal trajectory
loses global optimality) is obtained.
As argued, an extremal trajectory can lose optimality due to the existence of conjugate
points. Conjugate points are the critical points of the exponential mapping and are found
as roots of the Jacobian of the exponential mapping. The time at which the first conjugate
point exists is called the first conjugate time. We conclude that the first conjugate point
occurs later than the first Maxwell point and therefore the upper bound on cut time is given
by the first Maxwell time. In the end, we present 3-dimensional plots of some important
objects in sub-Riemannian problem on Lie group SH(2). |
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