Heavy-traffic asymptotic expansions for the asymptotic decay rates in theBMAP/G/1 queue
- 1 January 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Communications in Statistics. Stochastic Models
- Vol. 10 (2) , 453-498
- https://doi.org/10.1080/15326349408807304
Abstract
In great generality, the basic steady-state distributions in theBMAP/G/l queue have asymptotically exponential tails. Here we develop asymptotic expansions for the asymptotic decay rates of these tail probabilities in powers of one minus the traffic intensity. The first term coincides with the decay rate of the exponential distribution arising in the standard heavy-traffic limit. The coefficients of these heavy-traffic expansions depend on the moments of the service-time distribution and the derivatives of the Perron-Frobenius eigenvalue δ(z) of the BMAP matrix generating function D (z) at z = 1. We give recursive formulas for the derivatives δ(κ) (1). The asymptotic expansions provide the basis for efficiently computing the asymptotic decay rates as functions of the traffic intensity, i.e., the caudal characteristic curves. The asymptotic expansions also reveal what features of the model the asymptotic decay rates primarily depend upon. In particular, δ(z) coincides with the limiting time-average of the factorial cumulant generating function (the logarithm of the generating function) of the arrival counting process, and the derivatives δ(κ) (1) coincide with the asymptotic factorial cumulants of the arrival counting process. This insight is important for admission control schemes in multi-service networks based in part on asymptotic decay rates. The interpretation helps identify appropriate statistics to compute from network traffic data in order to predict performanceKeywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Squeezing the most out of ATMIEEE Transactions on Communications, 1996
- Asymptotics for steady-state tail probabilities in structured markov queueing modelsCommunications in Statistics. Stochastic Models, 1994
- Marked point processes as limits of Markovian arrival streamsJournal of Applied Probability, 1993
- Effective bandwidth of general Markovian traffic sources and admission control of high speed networksIEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking, 1993
- On cycle maxima, first passage problems and extreme value theory for queuesCommunications in Statistics. Stochastic Models, 1992
- Effective bandwidths for the multi-type UAS channelQueueing Systems, 1991
- Equivalent capacity and its application to bandwidth allocation in high-speed networksIEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications, 1991
- An Introduction to the Theory of Point Processes.Journal of the American Statistical Association, 1990
- Risk theory in a Markovian environmentScandinavian Actuarial Journal, 1989
- Measurements and approximations to describe the offered traffic and predict the average workload in a single-server queueProceedings of the IEEE, 1989