Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Preciado, Victor M.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.01558
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866911656582316032
author Preciado, Victor M.
author_facet Preciado, Victor M.
contents In Willems' behavioral systems theory, a dynamical system is identified with the set of all trajectories compatible with its laws of motion. In the linear time-invariant setting this trajectory set is a linear subspace, and its algebraic structure underpins the Fundamental Lemma: a single persistently exciting data trajectory generates the entire finite-horizon behavior. For nonlinear or stochastic systems, however, the admissible trajectory set is generally nonconvex, obstructing direct optimization over the behavior. In this paper, we lift the behavioral viewpoint from trajectories to probability measures on trajectories by representing a finite-horizon dynamical system with the set of all Borel probability measures supported on its admissible trajectories. For deterministic systems, this behavioral-measure set is convex and weakly closed even when the dynamics are nonlinear, because convex combinations of trajectory distributions remain dynamically admissible even when convex combinations of trajectories do not. Its extreme points are precisely the Dirac masses on individual admissible trajectories, so the classical deterministic theory is embedded as the extremal skeleton of the richer measure-valued object. On this foundation we establish two core deterministic results and outline a stochastic extension based on history-conditional kernel consistency.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2605_01558
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle A Measure-Theoretic Formulation of Behavioral Systems
Preciado, Victor M.
Optimization and Control
Systems and Control
In Willems' behavioral systems theory, a dynamical system is identified with the set of all trajectories compatible with its laws of motion. In the linear time-invariant setting this trajectory set is a linear subspace, and its algebraic structure underpins the Fundamental Lemma: a single persistently exciting data trajectory generates the entire finite-horizon behavior. For nonlinear or stochastic systems, however, the admissible trajectory set is generally nonconvex, obstructing direct optimization over the behavior. In this paper, we lift the behavioral viewpoint from trajectories to probability measures on trajectories by representing a finite-horizon dynamical system with the set of all Borel probability measures supported on its admissible trajectories. For deterministic systems, this behavioral-measure set is convex and weakly closed even when the dynamics are nonlinear, because convex combinations of trajectory distributions remain dynamically admissible even when convex combinations of trajectories do not. Its extreme points are precisely the Dirac masses on individual admissible trajectories, so the classical deterministic theory is embedded as the extremal skeleton of the richer measure-valued object. On this foundation we establish two core deterministic results and outline a stochastic extension based on history-conditional kernel consistency.
title A Measure-Theoretic Formulation of Behavioral Systems
topic Optimization and Control
Systems and Control
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.01558