par Cassez, Franck F.;Henzinger, Thomas A.;Raskin, Jean-François
Référence Lecture notes in computer science, 2289, page (134-148)
Publication Publié, 2002
Référence Lecture notes in computer science, 2289, page (134-148)
Publication Publié, 2002
Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : | In the literature, we find several formulations of the control problem for timed and hybrid systems.We argue that formulations where a controller can cause an action at any point in dense (rational or real) time are problematic, by presenting an example where the controller must act faster and faster, yet causes no Zeno effects (say, the control actions are at times (formula presented). Such a controller is, of course, not implementable in software. Such controllers are avoided by formulations where the controller can cause actions only at discrete (integer) points in time. While the resulting control problem is wellunderstood if the time unit, or “sampling rate” of the controller, is fixed a priori, we define a novel, stronger formulation: the discrete-time control problem with unknown sampling rate asks if a sampling controller exists for some sampling rate. We prove that this problem is undecidable even in the special case of timed automata. |