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This presentation explores the mathematical analysis of queueing systems and their applications in various physical examples. It discusses topics such as the Geo/Geo/1 queue, Brownian motion problem, busy period statistics, extreme value statistics, and more.
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Exact solutions for first-passage and related problems in certain classes of queueing system Michael J Kearney School of Electronics and Physical Sciences University of Surrey June 29th 2006
Presentation outline • Introduction to the Geo/Geo/1 queue • Some physical examples • Mathematical analysis • Link to the Brownian motion problem • Further problems
Queueing schematic Customers in Customers out Buffer Server Service protocol - First come, first served
Some questions of interest • Time until the queue is next empty • Busy period (first passage time) statistics • Probability that the busy period is infinite • Maximum queue length during a busy period • Extreme value statistics (correlated variables) • Cumulative waiting time during a busy period • Area under the curve
Areas of application • Abelian sandpile model • Compact directed percolation • Lattice polygons • Cellular automaton road traffic model
Cellular automaton model Queueing representation Nagel and Paczuski (1995) The link to road traffic
Maximum length L Lifetime T The maximum (extreme) length
Arrivals Departures
Three-fold strategy • A scaling approach based on the dominant balance method, following Richard (2002) • Consider the singularity structure of the generating function G(1,y) as y tends to unity, following Prellberg (1995) • Consider the equivalent problem for Brownian motion, following Kearney and Majumdar (2005)
Guillemin and Pinchon (1998) The M/M/1 queue Taking the continuous time limit (but discrete customers)
Rules Compact directed percolation time
Critical condition Making the connection …
Summary of key CDP results • Probability that the avalanches are infinite • critical condition • Distribution of avalanches by duration (perimeter) • Distribution of avalanches by size (area) Dhar and Ramaswamy (1989) Rajesh and Dhar (2005)
Conclusions • New results for discrete and continuous-time queues, and possibly deeper results • Large area scaling behaviour for CDP determined exactly at all points in the phase diagram • Exact solution for the v = 1 cellular automaton traffic model of Nagel and Paczuski • A solvable model of extreme statistics for strongly correlated variables
Departures Time Partition polygon queues Queue length N = 5 T = 7 Time
Some references • On a random area variable arising in discrete-time queues and compact directed percolation • M J Kearney 2004 J.Phys. A: Math. Gen., 37 8421 • On the area under a continuous time Brownian motion • M J Kearney and S N Majumdar 2005 J.Phys. A: Math. Gen., 38 4097 • A probabilistic growth model for partition polygons and related structures • M J Kearney 2004 J.Phys. A: Math. Gen., 37 3749