posted on 2007-11-19, 15:35authored byP. P. Menon, Jongrae Kim, D. G. Bates, Ian Postlethwaite
The application of two evolutionary optimization methods, namely, differential evolution and genetic algorithms, to the clearance of nonlinear flight control laws for highly augmented aircraft is described. The algorithms are applied to the problem of evaluating a nonlinear handling quality clearance criterion for a simulation model of a high-performance aircraft with a delta canard configuration and a full-authority flight control law. Hybrid versions of both algorithms, incorporating local gradient-based optimization, are also developed and evaluated. Statistical comparisons of computational cost and global convergence properties reveal the benefits of hybridization for both algorithms. The differential evolution approach in particular, when appropriately augmented with local optimization methods, is shown to have significant potential for improving both the reliability and efficiency of the current industrial flight clearance process
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IEEE Transactions on Evolutionary Computation, 2006, 10 (6), pp.689-699