Abstract The problem of output regulation has always been tackled in frameworks in which the references to be tracked and the disturbances to be rejected are generated by an autonomous… Click to show full abstract
Abstract The problem of output regulation has always been tackled in frameworks in which the references to be tracked and the disturbances to be rejected are generated by an autonomous differential equation, referred to as the exosystem. This assumption, that is routinely used in the design of asymptotic regulators, plays also a fundamental role in the formulation of the regulation problem and in the definition of the basic concepts such as the steady state and the zero dynamics of nonlinear systems. In this paper we show that the concepts of steady state, zero dynamics and the output regulation problem can be equivalently defined in a framework in which the exosystem is generated by a differential inclusion.
               
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