Some comments on single-server queuing methods and some new results
- 1 April 1964
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Mathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society
- Vol. 60 (2) , 237-251
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0305004100037701
Abstract
1.Introduction. Over the past few years, the theory of single-server queues has grown substantially. Much of the effort expended has been applied to the study of transient multivariate queuing processes in continuous time, i.e. to the study of joint time-dependent distributions of two or more system variables given some known initial system configuration. A variety of methods have been employed in these studies to accommodate general interarrival and service time distributions, among them Erlang's method of fictitious phases, the method of supplementary variables, the extended imbedded chain method, and the semi-Markov method. In the first part of this paper an informal review of these transient studies and of the methods employed is given.This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Queues Subject to Service InterruptionThe Annals of Mathematical Statistics, 1962
- A simple random walk and an associated asymptotic behaviour of the Bessel functionsMathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, 1962
- The General Bulk Queue as a Hilbert ProblemJournal of the Royal Statistical Society Series B: Statistical Methodology, 1962
- A Single-Server Queue with Recurrent Input and Exponentially Distributed Service TimesOperations Research, 1962
- On the Queueing Process $M/G/1$The Annals of Mathematical Statistics, 1961
- The Probability Law of the Busy Period for Two Types of Queuing ProcessesOperations Research, 1961
- Time-Dependent Solution of the Bulk-Service Queuing ProblemOperations Research, 1960
- On Time Dependent Queuing ProcessesThe Annals of Mathematical Statistics, 1960
- Investigation of waiting time problems by reduction to Markov processesActa Mathematica Hungarica, 1955
- Saddlepoint Approximations in StatisticsThe Annals of Mathematical Statistics, 1954