111 research outputs found

    Busy period analysis of the level dependent PH/PH/1/K queue

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    In this paper, we study the transient behavior of a level dependent single server queuing system with a waiting room of finite size during the busy period. The focus is on the level dependent PH/PH/1/K queue. We derive in closed form the joint transform of the length of the busy period, the number of customers served during the busy period, and the number of losses during the busy period. We differentiate between two types of losses: the overflow losses that are due to a full queue and the losses due to an admission controller. For the M/PH/1/K, M/PH/1/K under a threshold policy, and PH/M/1/K queues, we determine simple expressions for their joint transforms

    Performance of ad hoc networks with two-hop relay routing and limited packet lifetime (extended version)

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    We consider a mobile ad hoc network consisting of three types of nodes (source, destination and relay nodes) and using the two-hop relay routing. This type of routing takes advantage of the mobility and the storage capacity of the nodes, called the relay nodes, in order to route packets between a source and a destination. Packets at relay nodes are assumed to have a limited lifetime in the network. Nodes are moving inside a bounded region according to some random mobility model. Closed-form expressions and asymptotic results when the number of nodes is large are provided for the packet delivery delay and for the energy needed to transmit a packet from the source to its destination. We also introduce and evaluate a variant of the two-hop relay protocol that limits the number of generated copies in the network. Our model is validated through simulations for two mobility models (random waypoint and random direction mobility models), and the performance of the two-hop routing and of the epidemic routing protocols are compared.\ud \u

    Appointments for Care Pathway Patients

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    Time-Limited and k-Limited Polling Systems: A Matrix Analytic Solution

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    In this paper, we will develop a tool to analyze polling systems with the autonomous-server, the time-limited, and the k-limited service discipline. It is known that these disciplines do not satisfy the well-known branching property in polling system, therefore, hardly any exact result exists in the literature for them. Our strategy is to apply an iterative scheme that is based on relating in closed-form the joint queue-length at the beginning and the end of a server visit to a queue. These kernel relations are derived using the theory of absorbing Markov chains. Finally, we will show that our tool works also in the case of a tandem queueing network with a single server that can serve one queue at a time

    A transient analysis of polling systems operating under exponential time-limited service disciplines

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    In the present article, we analyze a class of time-limited polling systems. In particular, we will derive a direct relation for the evolution of the joint queue-length during the course of a server visit. This will be done both for the pure and the exhaustive exponential time-limited discipline for general service time requirements and preemptive service. More specifically, service of individual customers is according to the preemptive-repeat-random strategy, i.e., if a service is interrupted, then at the next server visit a new service time will be drawn from the original service-time distribution. Moreover, we incorporate customer routing in our analysis, such that it may be applied to a large variety of queueing networks with a single server operating under one of the before-mentioned time-limited service disciplines. We study the time-limited disciplines by performing a transient analysis for the queue length at the served queue. The analysis of the pure time-limited discipline builds on several known results for the transient analysis of the M/G/1 queue. Besides, for the analysis of the exhaustive discipline, we will derive several new results for the transient analysis of an M/G/1 during a busy period. The final expressions (both for the exhaustive and pure case) that we obtain for the key relations generalize previous results by incorporating customer routing or by relaxing the exponentiality assumption on the service times. Finally, based on the interpretation of these key relations, we formulate a conjecture for the key relation for any branching-type service discipline operating under an exponential time-limit

    A successive censoring algorithm for a system of connected QBD-processes

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    We consider a Markov Chain in which the state space is partitioned into sets where both transitions within sets and between sets have a special structure. Transitions within each set constitute a finite Quasi-Birth-and-Death-process, and transitions between sets are restricted to four types of transitions. We present a successive censoring algorithm, based on Matrix Analytic Methods, to obtain the stationary distribution of this system of connected QBD-processes

    Green Wave Analysis in a Tandem of Traffic-Light Intersections

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    Green waves in urban settings are seen to be beneficial both for the drivers and the environment because they lower delays and reduce pollution. To obtain these benefits, it is important to determine the optimal network parameters, e.g., green splits and offsets, that yield the desired traffic behaviour. We consider two possibilities for network optimization. The first one is minimising the average lost time per vehicle; the second one is maximizing the green wave efficiency. We compare the results with the MAXBAND algorithm, which is used at the design stage of arterial traffic light settings to facilitate green waves. Using our optimisation method, the average delay per vehicle can be reduced by up to 10% and more vehicles can encounter a green wave compared to the MAXBAND approach. The reduction of the average delay for the main stream reaches 20%
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