Lab Home | Phone | Search
Center for Nonlinear Studies  Center for Nonlinear Studies
 Home 
 People 
 Current 
 Affiliates 
 Visitors 
 Students 
 Research 
 ICAM-LANL 
 Publications 
 Conferences 
 Workshops 
 Sponsorship 
 Talks 
 Colloquia 
 Colloquia Archive 
 Seminars 
 Postdoc Seminars Archive 
 Quantum Lunch 
 Quantum Lunch Archive 
 CMS Colloquia 
 Q-Mat Seminars 
 Q-Mat Seminars Archive 
 P/T Colloquia 
 Archive 
 Kac Lectures 
 Kac Fellows 
 Dist. Quant. Lecture 
 Ulam Scholar 
 Colloquia 
 
 Jobs 
 Postdocs 
 CNLS Fellowship Application 
 Students 
 Student Program 
 Visitors 
 Description 
 Past Visitors 
 Services 
 General 
 
 History of CNLS 
 
 Maps, Directions 
 CNLS Office 
 T-Division 
 LANL 
 
Monday, February 09, 2015
3:00 PM - 4:00 PM
CNLS Conference Room (TA-3, Bldg 1690)

Colloquium

Distributed Control of Dynamical Flow Networks

Giacomo Como
Lund University

This talk focuses on distributed control of dynamical flow networks. These are modeled as dynamical systems derived from mass conservation laws on directed capacitated networks. The flow evolution through the network is governed by routing, scheduling, and flow control policies within constraints imposed by the network infrastructure and physical laws. Depending on the application (e.g., data networks, road traffic networks, distribution networks), such policies are meant to represent local controls, users’ behavior, or a combination of the two. Some versions of these models include cascading failures mechanisms, whereby overloaded links become inactive and potentially cause the overload and failure of other nodes and links in the network. We focus on efficiency, resilience, and scalability properties of such dynamical flow networks. First, we show that optimal throughput and resilience can be achieved by feedback policies that depend only on local information and require no global knowledge of the network. Then, we prove how the optimal selection of a stable equilibrium and the optimal control of the transient can be cast as convex problems which are amenable to distributed solutions. Applications to arterial traffic control are discussed.

Host: Misha Chertkov