@inproceedings{74, author = {Andrew Sogokon and Paul Jackson and Taylor Johnson}, title = {Verifying Safety and Persistence Properties of Hybrid Systems Using Flowpipes and Continuous Invariants}, abstract = {We propose a method for verifying persistence of nonlinear hybrid systems. Given some system and an initial set of states, the method can guarantee that system trajectories always eventually evolve into some specified target subset of the states of one of the discrete modes of the system, and always remain within this target region. The method also computes a time-bound within which the target region is always reached. The approach combines flowpipe computation with deductive reasoning about invariants and is more general than each technique alone. We illustrate the method with a case study concerning showing that potentially destructive stick-slip oscillations of an oil-well drill eventually die away for a certain choice of drill control parameters. The case study demonstrates how just using flow-pipes or just reasoning about invariants alone can be insufficient. The case study also nicely shows the richness of systems that the method can handle: the case study features a mode with non-polynomial (nonlinear) ODEs and we manage to prove the persistence property with the aid of an automatic prover specifically designed for handling transcendental functions.}, year = {2017}, journal = {NASA Formal Methods - 9th International Symposium}, volume = {10227}, pages = {194-211}, month = {05/2017}, publisher = {Springer}, address = {Moffett Field, CA, USA}, isbn = {978-3-319-57287-1}, }