A history of control engineering, 1930-1955
Bennett, Stuart
IEE control engineering series 47
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P. Peregrinus on behalf of the Institution of Electrical Engineers, London
1993
Following his book on the origin of control engineering (1800-1930 (see separate entry), the author now traces development through the critical period 1930-1955, widely identified as the period of 'classical' control theory. In the 1930s basic automatic control devices were developed and used in process industries, as were servos for the control of aircraft and ships and amplifiers for the telephone system and early computers etc. During the war many disparate ideas were brought together for the development of aircraft tracking and response systems -- leading to classical control theory which dominated the field through the 1950s. The foundations were also being laid for the introduction of what we now term 'modern' control theory.
Table of contents :
Content: Control technology in the 1930s
process control - technology and theory
the electronic negative feedback amplifier
theory and design of servomechanisms
wartime - problems and organizations
development of design of servomechanisms - 1939-1945
smoothing and prediction - 1939-1945
the classical years - 1945-1955.
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