Linear matrix inequality

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In convex optimization, a linear matrix inequality (LMI) is an expression of the form

Contents

Failed to parse (SVG (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "http://localhost:6011/en.wikipedia.org/v1/":): {\displaystyle \operatorname{LMI}(y):=A_0+y_1A_1+y_2A_2+\cdots+y_m A_m\succeq 0\,}

where

This linear matrix inequality specifies a convex constraint on .

Applications

There are efficient numerical methods to determine whether an LMI is feasible (e.g., whether there exists a vector y such that LMI(y)  0), or to solve a convex optimization problem with LMI constraints. Many optimization problems in control theory, system identification and signal processing can be formulated using LMIs. Also LMIs find application in Polynomial Sum-Of-Squares. The prototypical primal and dual semidefinite program is a minimization of a real linear function respectively subject to the primal and dual convex cones governing this LMI.

Solving LMIs

A major breakthrough in convex optimization was the introduction of interior-point methods. These methods were developed in a series of papers and became of true interest in the context of LMI problems in the work of Yurii Nesterov and Arkadi Nemirovski.

See also

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