There are plenty of challenging and interesting problems open for
investigation in the field of switched systems. Stability issues help to
generate many complex nonlinear dynamic behaviors within switched
systems. The authors present a thorough investigation of stability
effects on three broad classes of switching mechanism: arbitrary
switching where stability represents robustness to unpredictable and
undesirable perturbation, constrained switching, including random
(within a known stochastic distribution), dwell-time (with a known
minimum duration for each subsystem) and autonomously-generated (with a
pre-assigned mechanism) switching; and designed switching in which a
measurable and freely-assigned switching mechanism contributes to
stability by acting as a control input.
For each of these classes this book propounds: detailed stability
analysis and/or design, related robustness and performance issues,
connections to other control problems and many motivating and
illustrative examples.