A timed automaton is a mathematical model in automata theory that extends finite automata with a finite set of real-valued clocks. This formalism, introduced by Rajeev Alur and David Dill in 1994,[1] enables the modeling of systems where timing constraints are crucial.

In a timed automaton, all clock values increase uniformly with passing time. Transitions between states can be constrained by guards—conditions that compare clock values to integers—enabling or disabling transitions based on timing conditions. Clocks can also be reset during transitions. Timed automata are a decidable subclass of hybrid automata, making them theoretically tractable while maintaining significant modeling power.

Timed automata have become fundamental tools for analyzing time-dependent systems, including real-time systems, communication protocols, and embedded systems. Over the past three decades, researchers have developed methods for verifying both safety properties (ensuring bad states are never reached) and liveness properties (ensuring good states are eventually reached).

The proof that the state reachability problem for timed automata is decidable[2] was a breakthrough result that spurred extensive research into various extensions, including stopwatches, real-time tasks, cost functions, and timed games. Several software tools have been developed to specify and analyze timed automata, with UPPAAL, Kronos, and the TIMES schedulability analyzer being notable examples. While these tools continue to mature, they remain primarily academic research instruments.

Example

edit

Before formally defining what a timed automaton is, some examples are given.

Consider the language   of timed words   over the unary alphabet   such that there is an   during the first time unit, and there is less than one time unit between two successive  . A timed automaton recognizing this language, pictured nearby, uses a single clock  , which should never be equal to one. This clock counts the time since the start of the run if no   were emitted, or from the last   emitted otherwise. This means that each time an   is emitted, this clock is reset to zero.

 
Timed automaton accepting the language a* such that a letter is emitted in each open interval of length one.

Consider the language   of timed words   over the binary alphabet   such that each   is followed by a   in the next time unit. The timed automaton recognizing this language, pictured nearby, recalls whether or not there was an   that was not yet followed by a  . If it is not the case, it accepts the run, otherwise it rejects it. Furthermore, when there is such a  , it has a clock   that records the time elapsed since the first such   was emitted. In this case, a   cannot be emitted if the clock is at least equal to one, and thus the run fails.

 
A timed automaton accepting timed words over   where each occurrence of   is followed less than one time unit later by an occurrence of  .

Formal definition

edit

Timed automaton

edit

Formally, a timed automaton is a tuple   that consists of the following components:

  •   is a finite set called the alphabet or actions of  .
  •   is a finite set. The elements of   are called the locations or states of  .
  •   is the set of start locations.
  •   is a finite set called the clocks of  .
  •   is the set of accepting locations.
  •   is a set of edges, called transitions of  , where
    •   is the set of clock constraints involving clocks from  , and
    •   is the powerset of  .

An edge   from   is a transition from locations   to   with action  , guard   and clock resets  .

Extended state

edit

A pair with a ___location   and a clock valuation   is called either an extended state or a state.

Note that the word state is thus ambiguous, since, depending on the author, it may mean either a pair or an element of  . For the sake of the clarity, this article will use the term ___location for element of   and the term extended ___location for pairs.

Here lies one of the biggest difference between timed automata and finite automata. In a finite automaton, at some point of the execution, the state is entirely described by the number of letter read and by a finite number of possible values, which are actually called "states". That means that, given a state and a suffix of the word to read, the remaining of the run is totally determined. Thus, the word "finite" in the name "finite automata". However, as it is explained in the section "run" below, clocks are used to determine which transitions can be taken. So, in order to know the state of the automaton, it must both be known the ___location and the clock valuation.

Given a timed word   with  ,   an increasing sequence of non-negative number, and a timed automaton   as above, a run is a sequence of the form   satisfying the following constraint:

  • (initialization)  
  • (consecution), for all  , there exists an edge in   of the form   such that:
    • we assume that   time units passed, and at this time, the guard is satisfied. I.e.   satisfies  ,
    • the new clock valuation   corresponds to  , in which   time units passed and in which the clocks of   where reset. Formally,  .

The notion of accepting run is defined as in finite automata for finite words and as in Büchi automata for infinite words. That is, if   is finite of length  , then the run is accepting if  . If the word is infinite, then the run is accepting if and only if there exists an infinite number of position   such that  .

Deterministic timed automaton

edit

As in the case of finite and Büchi automaton, a timed automaton may be deterministic or non-deterministic. Intuitively, being deterministic has the same meaning in each of those case. It means that the set of start locations is a singleton, and that, given a state  , and a letter  , there is only one possible state which can be reached from   by reading  . However, in the case of timed automaton the formal definition is slightly more complex. Formally, a timed automaton is deterministic if:

  •   is a singleton
  • for each pair of transitions   and  , the set of clocks valuations satisfying   is disjoint from the set of clocks valuations satisfying  .

Closure property

edit

The class of languages recognized by non-deterministic timed automata is:

  • closed under union, indeed, the disjoint union of two timed automata recognize the union of the language recognized by those automata.
  • closed under intersection.[3]
  • not closed under complement.[4]

Problems and their complexity

edit

The computational complexity of some problems related to timed automata are now given.

The emptiness problem for timed automata can be solved by constructing a region automaton and checking whether it accepts the empty language. This problem is PSPACE-complete.[2]: 207 

The universality problem of non-deterministic timed automaton is undecidable, and more precisely Π1
1
. However, when the automaton contains a single clock, the property is decidable; however, it is not primitive recursive.[4] This problem consists of deciding whether every word is accepted by a timed automaton.

See also

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ Ingólfsdóttir, Anna; Srba, Jiri; Larsen, Kim Guldstrand; Aceto, Luca, eds. (2007), "Timed automata", Reactive Systems: Modelling, Specification and Verification, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 175–192, ISBN 978-0-521-87546-2, retrieved 2025-05-10
  2. ^ a b Rajeev Alur, David L. Dill. 1994 A Theory of Timed Automata. In Theoretical Computer Science, vol. 126, 183–235, pp. 194–1955
  3. ^ Modern Applications Of Automata, page 118
  4. ^ a b Lasota, SƗawomir; Walukiewicz, Igor (2008). "Alternating Timed Automata". ACM Transactions on Computational Logic. 9 (2): 1–26. arXiv:cs/0512031. doi:10.1145/1342991.1342994. S2CID 12319.