Pole
Location/Speed of Response
Pole location determines speed of response. Here is the argument.
-
How
far into the left half plane the pole is defines how quickly the system
will respond.
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There are two kinds of
poles.
-
Oscillatory poles have
complex parts - real and imaginary - (only one of two poles shown)
-
Exponentially descying
poles are real poles.
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On the figure below there
are hot spots around the pole locations - for a typical complex pole and
a typical real pole. Move the mouse over those hotspots for more
information - and read the material after the figure.
What do we note?
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The real part of the two
poles are the same.
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The settling times would
be the same for a system with the real pole and for a system with the two
complex poles - because the same time constant behavior is observed in
both systems.
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A system with a real pole
has a time constant that is the negative reciprocal of the pole.
-
t
= 1/(-p), where p = pole location (negative).
-
A system with complex
poles has a time constant for the decay of the sinusoid that is
the negative reciprocal of the real part of the pole.
-
The angle off the horizonal
(shown as f
in the diagram) determines the damping ratio for the two complex poles.
In particular, we have z
= cos(f),
where the damping ratio is z.
-
The damping ratio determines
how quickly the oscillations die out compared to the frequency of the oscillations.
The chart below is taken from this lesson, and shows percent overshoot
in a step response as a function of damping ratio. Note that overshoot
is imperceptible for damping ratios larger than about 0.8.
What do we conclude?
-
The speed of response
of a system is determined by how far into the left half plane the poles
of the system are.
-
The distance into the
left half plane is -1/t
since the pole is located there.
What if we want more information?