English

Implicit Linear Algebra and Basic Circuit Theory

Systems and Control 2020-05-05 v1 Systems and Control

Abstract

In this paper we derive some basic results of circuit theory using `Implicit Linear Algebra' (ILA). This approach has the advantage of simplicity and generality. Implicit linear algebra is outlined in [1]. We denote the space of all vectors on SS by FS\mathcal{F}_S and the space containing only the zero vector on SS by 0S.\mathbf{0}_S. The dual VS\mathcal{V}_S^{\perp} of a vector space VS\mathcal{V}_S is the collection of all vectors whose dot product with vectors in VS\mathcal{V}_S is zero. The basic operation of ILA is a linking operation ('matched composition`) between vector spaces VSP,VPQ\mathcal{V}_{SP},\mathcal{V}_{PQ} (regarded as collections of row vectors on column sets SP,PQ,S\cup P, P\cup Q, respectively with S,P,QS,P,Q disjoint) defined by VSPVPQ{(fS,hQ):((fS,gP)VSP,(gP,hQ)VPQ},\mathcal{V}_{SP}\leftrightarrow \mathcal{V}_{PQ}\equiv \{(f_S,h_Q):((f_S,g_P)\in \mathcal{V}_{SP}, (g_P,h_Q) \in \mathcal{V}_{PQ}\}, and another ('skewed composition`) defined by VSPVPQ{(fS,hQ):((fS,gP)VSP,(gP,hQ)VPQ}.\mathcal{V}_{SP}\rightleftharpoons \mathcal{V}_{PQ}\equiv \{(f_S,h_Q):((f_S,g_P)\in \mathcal{V}_{SP}, (-g_P,h_Q) \in \mathcal{V}_{PQ}\}. The basic results of ILA are the Implicit Inversion Theorem (which states that VSP(VSPVS)=VS,\mathcal{V}_{SP}\leftrightarrow(\mathcal{V}_{SP}\leftrightarrow \mathcal{V}_S)= \mathcal{V}_S, iff VSP0PVSVSPFS\mathcal{V}_{SP}\leftrightarrow \mathbf{0}_P\subseteq \mathcal{V}_S\subseteq \mathcal{V}_{SP}\leftrightarrow\mathcal{F}_S) and Implicit Duality Theorem (which states that (VSPVPQ)=(VSPVPQ(\mathcal{V}_{SP}\leftrightarrow \mathcal{V}_{PQ})^{\perp}= (\mathcal{V}_{SP}^{\perp}\rightleftharpoons \mathcal{V}_{PQ}^{\perp}). We show that the operations and results of ILA are useful in understanding basic circuit theory. We illustrate this by using ILA to present a generalization of Thevenin-Norton theorem where we compute multiport behaviour using adjoint multiport termination through a gyrator and a very general version of maximum power transfer theorem, which states that the port conditions that appear, during adjoint multiport termination through an ideal transformer, correspond to maximum power transfer.

Cite

@article{arxiv.2005.00838,
  title  = {Implicit Linear Algebra and Basic Circuit Theory},
  author = {H. Narayanan and Hariharan Narayanan},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2005.00838},
  year   = {2020}
}