Thank you for opening the second edition of this monograph, which is
devoted to the study of a class of nonsmooth dynamical systems of the
general form: :: i; = g(x, u) (0. 1) f(x, t) 2: 0 where x E JRn is the
system's state vector, u E JRm is the vector of inputs, and the function
f (-, . ) represents a unilateral constraint that is imposed on the
state. More precisely, we shall restrict ourselves to a subclass of such
systems, namely mechanical systems subject to unilateral constraints on
the position, whose dynamical equations may be in a first instance
written as: ii= g(q, q, u) (0. 2) f(q, t) 2: 0 where q E JRn is the
vector of generalized coordinates of the system and u is an in- put (or
controller) that generally involves a state feedback loop, i. e. u= u(q,
q, t, z), with z= Z(z, q, q, t) when the controller is a dynamic state
feedback. Mechanical systems composed of rigid bodies interacting fall
into this subclass. A general prop- erty of systems as in (0. 1) and (0.
2) is that their solutions are nonsmooth (with respect to time):
Nonsmoothness arises primarily from the occurence of impacts (or
collisions, or percussions) in the dynamical behaviour, when the
trajectories attain the surface f(x, t) = O. They are necessary to keep
the trajectories within the subspace = {x: f(x, t) 2: O} of the
system's state space.