“…Nevertheless, a large number of engineering examples from many fields stemming from mechanics to chemical or biological processes, enhance the authors' belief that, since flat outputs contain all the required dynamical informations to run the system, they may often be found by inspection among the key physical variables. This feature is particularly evident on the VTOL example (see [31], [45], and [49]), whose flat output is made up with the coordinates of the Huygens oscillation center and in the numerous applications to food engineering processes [5], car equipment design [6], car parking [16], [22], [67], crane control [22], [27], [44], tracking observers [28], magnetic bearings control [43], aircraft [48], [49], and helicopter control [55], induction motors [53], chemical reactors [64], [65], etc., recently treated by this approach.…”