English

The max-plus finite element method for solving deterministic optimal control problems: basic properties and convergence analysis

Optimization and Control 2009-12-13 v1 Numerical Analysis

Abstract

We introduce a max-plus analogue of the Petrov-Galerkin finite element method to solve finite horizon deterministic optimal control problems. The method relies on a max-plus variational formulation. We show that the error in the sup norm can be bounded from the difference between the value function and its projections on max-plus and min-plus semimodules, when the max-plus analogue of the stiffness matrix is exactly known. In general, the stiffness matrix must be approximated: this requires approximating the operation of the Lax-Oleinik semigroup on finite elements. We consider two approximations relying on the Hamiltonian. We derive a convergence result, in arbitrary dimension, showing that for a class of problems, the error estimate is of order δ+Δx(δ)1\delta+\Delta x(\delta)^{-1} or δ+Δx(δ)1\sqrt{\delta}+\Delta x(\delta)^{-1}, depending on the choice of the approximation, where δ\delta and Δx\Delta x are respectively the time and space discretization steps. We compare our method with another max-plus based discretization method previously introduced by Fleming and McEneaney. We give numerical examples in dimension 1 and 2.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.math/0603619,
  title  = {The max-plus finite element method for solving deterministic optimal control problems: basic properties and convergence analysis},
  author = {Marianne Akian and Stephane Gaubert and Asma Lakhoua},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:math/0603619},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

31 pages, 11 figures