What Is A "System"?
What Is A "System"?
What is a System?
In this course, a system is defined as any physical arrangement that has input(s) and output(s).
In the majority of examples we will use a Single Input and Single Output system (SISO), but all
principles and relations presented throughout the course can be easily extended to Multiple
Inputs and Multiple Output (MIMO) systems.
A system could be:
- Electrical: e.g. an electronic circuit with input current source and output voltage
- Mechanical: e.g. a mass connected to a mechanical spring with input force applied to the
mass and an output a compression (displacement) of the spring.
- Electromechanical: e.g. a combination of motor and mechanical load
- Thermal
- etc.
In this course, we will limit the majority of the examples to electrical, mechanical and
electromechanical only, but we keep in mind that the same principles apply to other systems and
engineering models as long as the basic properties and conditions stated in the course are valid.
To further clarify the concept, consider the simple electrical system shown in Figure 1.
0 () = ()
The difference between () and () is the sum of energy stored in the system and energy
dissipated by some elements within the system (e.g. due to friction). If the stored energy is zero
at all time, the system is said to be a "memoryless" system, otherwise the system has memory. A
memoryless system is also known as a order zero system.
Systems are made up of physical elements connected together. Some of these elements are
capable of storing energy (e.g. capacitor or compressed spring element), while others are not. A
zero order system (memoryless) is a system that does not have any element capable of storing
energy. If the system has one energy storage element, the system is called a first order system,
and if the system has two energy storage elements it is called a second order system and so on.
Therefore, the order of the system is numerically equal to the number of independent
number of elements that can store energy. Notice the inclusion of the word independent. The
reason for that is the fact that not all energy storage elements are independent. For example, if
we have two capacitors connected in parallel, we should count them as one capacitor because we
can simply replace them with one bigger capacitor. It is not always obvious if energy storage
elements are independent or not and this point will be further clarified later through some
illustrative examples.
Figure 6 illustrates a zero order electric system. It consists of four resistors. Obviously resistors
cannot store energy and in this example the energy flowing out of the system is the difference
between the energy flowing into it and the energy consumed by the resistors.
Note that, although the two physical systems are very different, they both lead to two similar
equations. This is a very important observation, because it points to a possible unified way of
modelling and simulation vastly different systems using the same mathematical model and the
same simulation technique.