PORTALE DELLA DIDATTICA

PORTALE DELLA DIDATTICA

PORTALE DELLA DIDATTICA

Elenco notifiche



Convex optimization and engineering applications

01OUWQW, 01OUWNG, 01OUWOQ, 01OUWOV

A.A. 2020/21

Course Language

Inglese

Degree programme(s)

Master of science-level of the Bologna process in Mechatronic Engineering (Ingegneria Meccatronica) - Torino
Master of science-level of the Bologna process in Ingegneria Matematica - Torino
Master of science-level of the Bologna process in Ingegneria Elettronica (Electronic Engineering) - Torino
Master of science-level of the Bologna process in Ingegneria Informatica (Computer Engineering) - Torino

Course structure
Teaching Hours
Lezioni 20
Esercitazioni in aula 40
Tutoraggio 40
Lecturers
Teacher Status SSD h.Les h.Ex h.Lab h.Tut Years teaching
Calafiore Giuseppe Carlo Professore Ordinario IINF-04/A 20 40 0 0 12
Co-lectures
Espandi

Context
SSD CFU Activities Area context
ING-INF/04 6 B - Caratterizzanti Ingegneria dell'automazione
2020/21
Optimization is a technology that can be used for devising effective decisions or predictions in a variety of contexts, ranging from production planning, to engineering design, finance, machine learning and data science, to mention just a few. In simplified terms, the process for reaching a decision starts with a phase of construction of a suitable mathematical model for a concrete problem, followed by a phase where the model is solved by means of suitable numerical algorithms. An optimization model typically requires the specification of a quantitative objective criterion of goodness for our decision, which we wish to maximize (or, alternatively, a criterion of cost, which we wish to minimize), as well as the specification of constraints, representing the physical limits of our decision actions, budgets on resources, design requirements than need be met, etc. An optimal design is one who gives the best possible objective value, while satisfying all problem constraints. While a generic optimization approach typically leads to computational problems that are very hard to solve in practice, convex problems, which are the core of this course, possess special properties that make them amenable to very efficient numerical solution techniques. This course therefore concentrates on recognizing, modeling and solving convex optimization problems that arise in several scientific contexts (engineering, finance, control, data science, etc.), and in showing the relevance of these methodologies in practical applications.
Optimization is a technology that can be used for devising effective decisions or predictions in a variety of contexts, ranging from production planning, to engineering design, finance, machine learning and data science, to mention just a few. In simplified terms, the process for reaching a decision starts with a phase of construction of a suitable mathematical model for a concrete problem, followed by a phase where the model is solved by means of suitable numerical algorithms. An optimization model typically requires the specification of a quantitative objective criterion of goodness for our decision, which we wish to maximize (or, alternatively, a criterion of cost, which we wish to minimize), as well as the specification of constraints, representing the physical limits of our decision actions, budgets on resources, design requirements than need be met, etc. An optimal design is one who gives the best possible objective value, while satisfying all problem constraints. While a generic optimization approach typically leads to computational problems that are very hard to solve in practice, convex problems, which are the core of this course, possess special properties that make them amenable to very efficient numerical solution techniques. This course therefore concentrates on recognizing, modeling and solving convex optimization problems that arise in several scientific contexts (engineering, finance, control, data science, etc.), and in showing the relevance of these methodologies in practical applications.
To give students the tools and training to recognize convex optimization problems that arise in engineering and other branches of science; to present the basic theory of such problems, concentrating on results that are useful in computation; to give students an understanding of how such problems are solved, and some experience in solving them.
To give students the tools and training to recognize convex optimization problems that arise in engineering and other branches of science; to present the basic theory of such problems, concentrating on results that are useful in computation; to give students an understanding of how such problems are solved, and some experience in solving them.
Good knowledge of linear algebra, geometry, calculus, and some exposure to probability. Exposure to numerical computing, optimization, systems and control theory, and application fields is helpful but not strictly required.
Good knowledge of linear algebra, geometry, calculus, and some exposure to probability. Exposure to numerical computing, optimization, systems and control theory, and application fields is helpful but not strictly required.
Introduction, convex sets and convex functions. Optimization problems in standard form, optimality criteria. Systems of linear equations, Least Squares (LS), Linear Programming (LP), Ell-one norm optimization, Chebychev approximation. Application examples: generation of force/torque via thrusters, uniform illumination of patch surfaces, etc. Quadratic Programming (QP) and Second Order Cone Programming (SOCP). Application examples (e.g. FIR filter design, antenna array design, sidelobe level minimization, etc.). Linear Matrix Inequalities (LMI) and semidefinite programming (SDP). Geometric programming (GP). Software tools (CVX and/or YALMIP). Applications: data-fitting, approximation and estimation, uncertain and robust Least Squares, portfolio optimization. Geometrical problems: containment of poyhedra, classification, Lowner-John ellipsoids, linear discrimination, support vector machines. Focus topics (mutually exclusive, to be offered alternatively over years): - LMIs in systems and control theory. - Sparse optimization and compressed sensing. - Convex optimization in Finance. - Convex optimization in algebraic geometry, global polynominal positivity (positivstellensaatz). - Network optimization, distributed optimization.
Introduction, convex sets and convex functions. Optimization problems in standard form, optimality criteria. Systems of linear equations, Least Squares (LS), Linear Programming (LP), Ell-one norm optimization, Chebychev approximation. Application examples: generation of force/torque via thrusters, uniform illumination of patch surfaces, etc. Quadratic Programming (QP) and Second Order Cone Programming (SOCP). Application examples (e.g. FIR filter design, antenna array design, sidelobe level minimization, etc.). Linear Matrix Inequalities (LMI) and semidefinite programming (SDP). Geometric programming (GP). Software tools (CVX and/or YALMIP). Applications: data-fitting, approximation and estimation, uncertain and robust Least Squares, portfolio optimization. Geometrical problems: containment of poyhedra, classification, Lowner-John ellipsoids, linear discrimination, support vector machines. Focus topics (mutually exclusive, to be offered alternatively over years): - LMIs in systems and control theory. - Sparse optimization and compressed sensing. - Convex optimization in Finance. - Convex optimization in algebraic geometry, global polynominal positivity (positivstellensaatz). - Network optimization, distributed optimization.
The course is organized in a series of lectures (about 1/3 of the course) and computer lab exercises and practice sessions (about 2/3 of the course).
The course is organized in a series of lectures (about 1/3 of the course) and computer lab exercises and practice sessions (about 2/3 of the course).
G.C. Calafiore and L. El Ghaoui, Optimization Models, Cambridge Univ. Press, 2014. S. Boyd and L. Vandenberghe; Convex Optimization, Cambridge Univ. Press, 2004.
G.C. Calafiore and L. El Ghaoui, Optimization Models, Cambridge Univ. Press, 2014. S. Boyd and L. Vandenberghe; Convex Optimization, Cambridge Univ. Press, 2004.
Modalità di esame: Prova scritta tramite PC con l'utilizzo della piattaforma di ateneo; Prova scritta tramite l'utilizzo di vLAIB e piattaforma di ateneo;
The final exam consists in a written test, which will contain a mixture of methodological questions and numerical exercises (to be executed with pen and paper; use of a calculator is allowed. If some of the questions explicitly require the use of Matlab, then use of Matlab is allowed via vLAIB) and which will take the form of multiple-choice questionar. Use of paper material (books, notes, etc.) is allowed. The exam will contain around 11 questions and it must be completed in 1 hour and 50 min.
Exam: Computer-based written test using the PoliTo platform; Written test via vLAIB using the PoliTo platform;
The final exam consists in a written test, which will contain a mixture of methodological questions and numerical exercises (to be executed with pen and paper; use of a calculator is allowed. If some of the questions explicitly require the use of Matlab, then use of Matlab is allowed via vLAIB) and which will take the form of multiple-choice questionar. Use of didactic material (books, notes, etc.) is allowed. The exam will contain around 11 questions and it must be completed in 1 hour and 45 min.
Modalità di esame: Prova scritta (in aula); Prova scritta tramite PC con l'utilizzo della piattaforma di ateneo; Prova scritta tramite l'utilizzo di vLAIB e piattaforma di ateneo;
The final exam consists in a written test, which will contain a mixture of methodological questions and numerical exercises (to be executed with pen and paper; use of a calculator is allowed. If some of the questions explicitly require the use of Matlab, then use of Matlab is allowed via vLAIB) and which will take the form of multiple-choice questionar. Use of paper material (books, notes, etc.) is allowed. The exam will contain around 11 questions and it must be completed in 1 hour and 50 min.
Exam: Written test; Computer-based written test using the PoliTo platform; Written test via vLAIB using the PoliTo platform;
The final exam consists in a written test, which will contain a mixture of methodological questions and numerical exercises (to be executed with pen and paper; use of a calculator is allowed. If some of the questions explicitly require the use of Matlab, then use of Matlab is allowed via vLAIB) and which will take the form of multiple-choice questionar. Use of didactic material (books, notes, etc.) is allowed. The exam will contain around 11 questions and it must be completed in 1 hour and 45 min.
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