In control theory, the state-transition matrix is a matrix whose product with the state vector at an initial time gives at a later time . The state-transition matrix can be used to obtain the general solution of linear dynamical systems. The state-transition matrix is used to find the solution to a general state-space representation of a linear system in the following form where are the states of the system, is the input signal, and are matrix functions, and is the initial condition at . Using the state-transition matrix , the solution is given by: The first term is known as the zero-input response and represents how the system's state would evolve in the absence of any input. The second term is known as the zero-state response and defines how the inputs impact the system. The most general transition matrix is given by the Peano–Baker series where is the identity matrix. This matrix converges uniformly and absolutely to a solution that exists and is unique. The state transition matrix satisfies the following relationships:
, ,
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