Bibliographic references, Commonly used nomenclature, Conventions – National Instruments NI MATRIXx Xmath User Manual
Page 9
Chapter 1
Introduction
1-2
ni.com
•
Chapter 5,
, describes three utility functions:
hankelsv( )
,
stable( )
, and
compare( )
.
•
Chapter 6,
, illustrates a number of the MRM functions and
their underlying ideas.
Bibliographic References
Throughout this document, bibliographic references are cited with
bracketed entries. For example, a reference to [VODM1] corresponds
to a paper published by Van Overschee and De Moor. For a table of
bibliographic references, refer to Appendix A,
.
Commonly Used Nomenclature
This manual uses the following general nomenclature:
•
Matrix variables are generally denoted with capital letters; vectors are
represented in lowercase.
•
G(s) is used to denote a transfer function of a system where s is the
Laplace variable. G(q) is used when both continuous and discrete
systems are allowed.
•
H(s) is used to denote the frequency response, over some range of
frequencies of a system where s is the Laplace variable. H(q) is used
to indicate that the system can be continuous or discrete.
•
A single apostrophe following a matrix variable, for example, x’,
denotes the transpose of that variable. An asterisk following a matrix
variable, for example, A*, indicates the complex conjugate, or
Hermitian, transpose of that variable.
Conventions
This publication makes use of the following types of conventions: font,
format, symbol, mouse, and note. These conventions are detailed in
Chapter 2, MATRIXx Publications, Online Help, and Customer Support,
of the MATRIXx Getting Started Guide.