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HyVisual 5.0.1
Haiyang Zheng, Christopher Brooks, Edward A. Lee, Jie Liu, Xiaojun Liu, Stephen Neuendorffer

Citation
Haiyang Zheng, Christopher Brooks, Edward A. Lee, Jie Liu, Xiaojun Liu, Stephen Neuendorffer. "HyVisual 5.0.1". UC Berkeley, 7, October, 2005.

Abstract
Hybrid systems are systems with continuous-time dynamics, discrete events, and discrete mode changes. HyVisual supports construction of hierarchical hybrid systems. It uses a block-diagram representation of ordinary differential equations (ODEs) to define continuous dynamics. It uses a bubble-and-arc diagram representation of finite state machines to define discrete behavior.

Electronic downloads

Citation formats  
  • HTML
    Haiyang Zheng, Christopher Brooks, Edward A. Lee, Jie Liu,
    Xiaojun Liu, Stephen Neuendorffer. <a
    href="http://chess.eecs.berkeley.edu/pubs/48.html"
    ><i>HyVisual 5.0.1</i></a>, UC
    Berkeley, 7, October, 2005.
  • Plain text
    Haiyang Zheng, Christopher Brooks, Edward A. Lee, Jie Liu,
    Xiaojun Liu, Stephen Neuendorffer. "HyVisual
    5.0.1". UC Berkeley, 7, October, 2005.
  • BibTeX
    @software{ZhengBrooksLeeLiuLiuNeuendorffer05_HyVisual501,
        author = {Haiyang Zheng and Christopher Brooks and Edward A.
                  Lee and Jie Liu and Xiaojun Liu and Stephen
                  Neuendorffer},
        title = {HyVisual 5.0.1},
        institution = {UC Berkeley},
        day = {7},
        month = {October},
        year = {2005},
        abstract = {Hybrid systems are systems with continuous-time
                  dynamics, discrete events, and discrete mode
                  changes. HyVisual supports construction of
                  hierarchical hybrid systems. It uses a
                  block-diagram representation of ordinary
                  differential equations (ODEs) to define continuous
                  dynamics. It uses a bubble-and-arc diagram
                  representation of finite state machines to define
                  discrete behavior.},
        URL = {http://chess.eecs.berkeley.edu/pubs/48.html}
    }
    

Posted by Christopher Brooks on 4 May 2006.
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