Pontryagin's maximum principle

Pontryagin's maximum principle is used in optimal control theory to find the best possible control for taking a dynamical system from one state to another, especially in the presence of constraints for the state or input controls. It states that it is necessary for any optimal control along with the optimal state trajectory to solve the so-called Hamiltonian system, which is a two-point boundary value problem, plus a maximum condition of the control Hamiltonian.[a] These necessary conditions become sufficient under certain convexity conditions on the objective and constraint functions.[1][2]

The maximum principle was formulated in 1956 by the Russian mathematician Lev Pontryagin and his students,[3][4] and its initial application was to the maximization of the terminal speed of a rocket.[5] The result was derived using ideas from the classical calculus of variations.[6] After a slight perturbation of the optimal control, one considers the first-order term of a Taylor expansion with respect to the perturbation; sending the perturbation to zero leads to a variational inequality from which the maximum principle follows.[7]

Widely regarded as a milestone in optimal control theory, the significance of the maximum principle lies in the fact that maximizing the Hamiltonian is much easier than the original infinite-dimensional control problem; rather than maximizing over a function space, the problem is converted to a pointwise optimization.[8] A similar logic leads to Bellman's principle of optimality, a related approach to optimal control problems which states that the optimal trajectory remains optimal at intermediate points in time.[9] The resulting Hamilton–Jacobi–Bellman equation provides a necessary and sufficient condition for an optimum, and admits a straightforward extension to stochastic optimal control problems, whereas the maximum principle does not.[7] However, in contrast to the Hamilton–Jacobi–Bellman equation, which needs to hold over the entire state space to be valid, Pontryagin's Maximum Principle is potentially more computationally efficient in that the conditions which it specifies only need to hold over a particular trajectory.


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  1. ^ Mangasarian, O. L. (1966). "Sufficient Conditions for the Optimal Control of Nonlinear Systems". SIAM Journal on Control. 4 (1): 139–152. doi:10.1137/0304013.
  2. ^ Kamien, Morton I.; Schwartz, Nancy L. (1971). "Sufficient Conditions in Optimal Control Theory". Journal of Economic Theory. 3 (2): 207–214. doi:10.1016/0022-0531(71)90018-4.
  3. ^ Boltyanski, V.; Martini, H.; Soltan, V. (1998). "The Maximum Principle – How it came to be?". Geometric Methods and Optimization Problems. New York: Springer. pp. 204–227. ISBN 0-7923-5454-0.
  4. ^ Gamkrelidze, R. V. (1999). "Discovery of the Maximum Principle". Journal of Dynamical and Control Systems. 5 (4): 437–451. doi:10.1023/A:1021783020548. S2CID 122690986. Reprinted in Bolibruch, A. A.; et al., eds. (2006). Mathematical Events of the Twentieth Century. Berlin: Springer. pp. 85–99. ISBN 3-540-23235-4.
  5. ^ For first published works, see references in Fuller, A. T. (1963). "Bibliography of Pontryagin's Maximum Principle". J. Electronics & Control. 15 (5): 513–517. doi:10.1080/00207216308937602.
  6. ^ McShane, E. J. (1989). "The Calculus of Variations from the Beginning Through Optimal Control Theory". SIAM J. Control Optim. 27 (5): 916–939. doi:10.1137/0327049.
  7. ^ a b Yong, J.; Zhou, X. Y. (1999). "Maximum Principle and Stochastic Hamiltonian Systems". Stochastic Controls: Hamiltonian Systems and HJB Equations. New York: Springer. pp. 101–156. ISBN 0-387-98723-1.
  8. ^ Sastry, Shankar (March 29, 2009). "Lecture Notes 8. Optimal Control and Dynamic Games" (PDF).
  9. ^ Zhou, X. Y. (1990). "Maximum Principle, Dynamic Programming, and their Connection in Deterministic Control". Journal of Optimization Theory and Applications. 65 (2): 363–373. doi:10.1007/BF01102352. S2CID 122333807.