TY - BOOK AU - Grossman,Robert L. AU - Nerode,Anil AU - Ravn,Anders P. AU - Rischel,Hans ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - Hybrid Systems T2 - Lecture Notes in Computer Science, SN - 9783540480600 AV - TK7895.M5 U1 - 004.1 23 PY - 1993/// CY - Berlin, Heidelberg PB - Springer Berlin Heidelberg KW - Computer science KW - Software engineering KW - Computer software KW - Logic design KW - Computer Science KW - Processor Architectures KW - Special Purpose and Application-Based Systems KW - Software Engineering KW - Computation by Abstract Devices KW - Algorithm Analysis and Problem Complexity KW - Logics and Meanings of Programs N1 - Verifying hybrid systems -- An extended duration calculus for hybrid real-time systems -- Towards refining temporal specifications into hybrid systems -- Hybrid systems in TLA+ -- Hybrid models with fairness and distributed clocks -- A compositional approach to the design of hybrid systems -- An approach to the description and analysis of hybrid systems -- Integration Graphs: A class of decidable hybrid systems -- Hybrid automata: An algorithmic approach to the specification and verification of hybrid systems -- Hybrid Systems: the SIGNAL approach -- A dynamical simulation facility for hybrid systems -- Event identification and intelligent hybrid control -- Multiple agent hybrid control architecture -- Models for hybrid systems: Automata, topologies, controllability, observability -- Some remarks about flows in hybrid systems -- Hybrid system modeling and autonomous control systems -- Fault accommodation in feedback control systems -- On formal support for industrial-scale requirements analysis -- A formal approach to computer systems requirements documentation N2 - Hybrid systems are networks of interacting digital and analog devices. Control systems for inherently unstable aircraft and computer aided manufacturing are typical applications for hybrid systems, but due to the rapid development of processor and circuit technology modern cars and consumer electronics use software to control physical processes. The identifying characteristic of hybrid systems is that they incorporate both continuous components governed by differential equations and also digital components - digital computers, sensors, and actuators controlled by programs. This volume of invited refereed papers is inspired by a workshop on the Theory of Hybrid Systems, held at the Technical University, Lyngby, Denmark, in October 1992, and by a prior Hybrid Systems Workshop, held at Cornell University, USA, in June 1991, organized by R.L. Grossman and A. Nerode. Some papers are the final versions of papers presented at these workshops and some are invited papers from other researchers who were not able to attend these workshops UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-57318-6 ER -