Queues with Customer Induced Interruption

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Queues with Customer Induced Interruption

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dc.contributor.author Varghese,Jacob
dc.contributor.author Dr.Krishnamoorthy,A
dc.contributor.author Dr.Narayanan Namboothiri, M N
dc.date.accessioned 2013-12-17T05:38:15Z
dc.date.available 2013-12-17T05:38:15Z
dc.date.issued 2012-06-16
dc.identifier.uri http://dyuthi.cusat.ac.in/purl/3137
dc.description Department of Mathematics, Cochin University of Science and Technology. en_US
dc.description.abstract In this thesis we have introduced and studied the notion of self interruption of service by customers. Service interruption in queueing systems have been extensively discussed in literature (see, Krishnamoorthy, Pramod and Chakravarthy [38]) for the most recent survey. So far all work reported deal with cases in which service interruptions are generated by sources other than customers. However, there are situations where interruptions are due to the customers rather than the system. Such situations are especially arise at doctors clinic, banks, reservation counter etc. Our attempt is to quantify a few of such problems. Systematically we have proceed from single server queue (in Chapter 2) to multi-server queues (Chapter 3). In Chapte 4, we have studied a very general multiserver queueing model with service interruption and protection of service phases. We also introduced customer interruption in a retrial setup (in Chapter 5). All models (from Chapter 2 to Chapter 4) that were analyzed involve 'non-preemptive priority' for interrupted customers where as in the model discussed in Chapter 5 interruption of service by customers is not encouraged. So the interrupted customers cannot access the server as long as there are primary customers in the system. In Chapter 5 we have obtained an explicit expression for the stability condition of the system. In all models analyzed in this thesis, we have assumed that no more than one interruption is allowed for a customer while in service. Since the models are not analytically tractable, a large number of numerical illustrations were given in each chapter it illustrate the working of the systems. We can extend the models discussed in this thesis to several directions. For example some of the models can be analyzed with both server induced and customer induced interruptions the results for which are not available till date. Another possible extension of work is to the case where there is no bound on the number of interruptions a customer is permitted to have before service completion. More complex is the case where a customer is permitted to have a nite number (K ≥ 2) of We can extend the models discussed in this thesis to several directions. en_US
dc.description.sponsorship Cochin University of Science and Technology. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Cochin University of Science and Technology en_US
dc.subject Phase Type distribution en_US
dc.subject Quasi-birth-death processes en_US
dc.subject Matrix Analytic Method en_US
dc.subject Computation of R matrix en_US
dc.subject Markovian Arrival Process en_US
dc.subject Queueing model en_US
dc.title Queues with Customer Induced Interruption en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US


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