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Richards' theorem is a mathematical result due to
Paul I. Richards Paul Irving Richards (1923–1978) was a physicist and applied mathematician. Richard's is best known to electrical engineers for the eponymous Richards' transformation. However, much of his career was concerned with radiation transport and flui ...
in 1947. The theorem states that for, :R(s) = \frac if Z(s) is a
positive-real function Positive-real functions, often abbreviated to PR function or PRF, are a kind of mathematical function that first arose in electrical network synthesis. They are complex functions, ''Z''(''s''), of a complex variable, ''s''. A rational function i ...
(PRF) then R(s) is a PRF for all real, positive values of k. The theorem has applications in electrical
network synthesis Network synthesis is a design technique for linear electrical circuits. Synthesis starts from a prescribed impedance function of frequency or frequency response and then determines the possible networks that will produce the required response. ...
. The PRF property of an impedance function determines whether or not a passive network can be realised having that impedance. Richards' theorem led to a new method of realising such networks in the 1940s.


Proof

: R(s) = \frac where Z(s) is a PRF, k is a positive real constant, and s= \sigma + i \omega is the
complex frequency In mathematics, the Laplace transform, named after its discoverer Pierre-Simon Laplace (), is an integral transform that converts a function of a real variable (usually t, in the ''time domain'') to a function of a complex variable s (in the ...
variable, can be written as, : R(s) = \dfrac where, : W(s) = \left ( \frac \right ) Since Z(s) is PRF then : 1 + \dfrac is also PRF. The zeroes of this function are the poles of W(s). Since a PRF can have no zeroes in the right-half ''s''-plane, then W(s) can have no poles in the right-half ''s''-plane and hence is analytic in the right-half ''s''-plane. Let : Z(i \omega) = r (\omega) + ix(\omega) Then the magnitude of W(i \omega) is given by, : \left , W(i \omega) \right , = \sqrt Since the PRF condition requires that r(\omega) \ge 0 for all \omega then \left , W(i \omega) \right , \le 1 for all \omega. The maximum magnitude of W(s) occurs on the i \omega axis because W(s) is analytic in the right-half ''s''-plane. Thus , W(s), \le 1 for \sigma \ge 0. Let W(s) = u( \sigma, \omega) + iv( \sigma, \omega), then the real part of R(s) is given by, : \Re (R(s)) = \dfrac Because W(s) \le 1 for \sigma \ge 0 then \Re (R(s)) \ge 0 for \sigma \ge 0 and consequently R(s) must be a PRF. Richards' theorem can also be derived from
Schwarz's lemma In mathematics, the Schwarz lemma, named after Hermann Amandus Schwarz, is a result in complex analysis about holomorphic functions from the open unit disk to itself. The lemma is less celebrated than deeper theorems, such as the Riemann mapping ...
.


Uses

The theorem was introduced by
Paul I. Richards Paul Irving Richards (1923–1978) was a physicist and applied mathematician. Richard's is best known to electrical engineers for the eponymous Richards' transformation. However, much of his career was concerned with radiation transport and flui ...
as part of his investigation into the properties of PRFs. The term ''PRF'' was coined by
Otto Brune Otto Walter Heinrich Oscar Brune (10 January 1901 – 1982) undertook some key investigations into network synthesis at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) where he graduated in 1929. His doctoral thesis was supervised by Wilhelm Ca ...
who proved that the PRF property was a
necessary and sufficient In logic and mathematics, necessity and sufficiency are terms used to describe a conditional or implicational relationship between two statements. For example, in the conditional statement: "If then ", is necessary for , because the truth of ...
condition for a function to be realisable as a passive electrical network, an important result in
network synthesis Network synthesis is a design technique for linear electrical circuits. Synthesis starts from a prescribed impedance function of frequency or frequency response and then determines the possible networks that will produce the required response. ...
. Richards gave the theorem in his 1947 paper in the reduced form, :R(s) = \frac that is, the special case where k=1 The theorem (with the more general casse of k being able to take on any value) formed the basis of the
network synthesis Network synthesis is a design technique for linear electrical circuits. Synthesis starts from a prescribed impedance function of frequency or frequency response and then determines the possible networks that will produce the required response. ...
technique presented by
Raoul Bott Raoul Bott (September 24, 1923 – December 20, 2005) was a Hungarian- American mathematician known for numerous basic contributions to geometry in its broad sense. He is best known for his Bott periodicity theorem, the Morse–Bott functions whi ...
and
Richard Duffin Richard James Duffin (1909 – October 29, 1996) was an American physicist, known for his contributions to electrical transmission theory and to the development of geometric programming and other areas within operations research. Education and ...
in 1949. In the Bott-Duffin synthesis, Z(s) represents the electrical network to be synthesised and R(s) is another (unknown) network incorporated within it (R(s) is unitless, but R(s)Z(k) has units of impedance and R(s)/Z(k) has units of admittance). Making Z(s) the subject gives : Z(s) = \left ( \frac + \frac \right )^ + \left ( \frac + \frac \right )^ Since Z(k) is merely a positive real number, Z(s) can be synthesised as a new network proportional to R(s) in parallel with a capacitor all in series with a network proportional to the inverse of R(s) in parallel with an inductor. By a suitable choice for the value of k, a resonant circuit can be extracted from R(s) leaving a function Z'(s) two degrees lower than Z(s). The whole process can then be applied iteratively to Z'(s) until the degree of the function is reduced to something that can be realised directly. The advantage of the Bott-Duffin synthesis is that, unlike other methods, it is able to synthesise any PRF. Other methods have limitations such as only being able to deal with two kinds of element in any single network. Its major disadvantage is that it does not result in the minimal number of elements in a network. The number of elements grows exponentially with each iteration. After the first iteration there are two Z' and associated elements, after the second, there are four Z'' and so on. Hubbard notes that Bott and Duffin appeared not to know the relationship of Richards' theorem to Schwarz's lemma and offers it as his own discovery, but it was certainly known to Richards who used it in his own proof of the theorem.Richards, p. 779


References


Bibliography

* Bott, Raoul; Duffin, Richard
"Impedance synthesis without use of transformers"
''Journal of Applied Physics'', vol. 20, iss. 8, p. 816, August 1949. * Cauer, Emil; Mathis, Wolfgang; Pauli, Rainer
"Life and Work of Wilhelm Cauer (1900 – 1945)"
''Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Symposium of Mathematical Theory of Networks and Systems (MTNS2000)'', Perpignan, June, 2000. * Hubbard, John H., "The Bott-Duffin synthesis of electrical circuits", pp. 33–40 in, Kotiuga, P. Robert (ed), ''A Celebration of the Mathematical Legacy of Raoul Bott'', American Mathematical Society, 2010 . * Hughes, Timothy H.; Morelli, Alessandro; Smith, Malcolm C.
"Electrical network synthesis: A survey of recent work"
pp. 281–293 in, Tempo, R.; Yurkovich, S.; Misra, P. (eds), ''Emerging Applications of Control and Systems Theory'', Springer, 2018 . * Richards, Paul I.
"A special class of functions with positive real part in a half-plane"
''Duke Mathematical Journal'', vol. 14, no. 3, 777–786, 1947. * Wing, Omar, ''Classical Circuit Theory'', Springer, 2008 {{ISBN, 0387097406. Theorems in complex analysis Electronic engineering Network synthesis Circuit theorems