Queues with non-stationary input stream: Ross's conjecture
- 1 March 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Advances in Applied Probability
- Vol. 13 (03), 603-618
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0001867800036296
Abstract
Characteristics of queues with non-stationary input streams are difficult to evaluate, therefore their bounds are of importance. First we define what we understand by the stationary delay and find out the stability conditions of single-server queues with non-stationary inputs. For this purpose we introduce the notion of an ergodically stable sequence of random variables. The theory worked out is applied to single-server queues with stationary doubly stochastic Poisson arrivals. Then the interarrival times do not form a stationary sequence (‘time stationary’ does not imply ‘customer stationary’). We show that the average customer delay in the queue is greater than in a standard M/G/1 queue with the same average input rate and service times. This result is used in examples which show that the assumption of stationarity of the input point process is non-essential.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Stochastic inequalities between customer-stationary and time-stationary characteristics of queueing systems with point processesJournal of Applied Probability, 1980
- Average delay in queues with non-stationary Poisson arrivalsJournal of Applied Probability, 1978
- Time and customer processes in queues with stationary inputsJournal of Applied Probability, 1977
- Further stochastic order relations among GI/GI/1 queues with a common traffic intensityMathematische Operationsforschung und Statistik. Series Optimization, 1977
- Convexity and Conditional ExpectationsThe Annals of Probability, 1974
- Technical Note—A Last Word on L = λWOperations Research, 1974
- Station re zuf llige Ma e auf lokalkompakten Abelschen GruppenProbability Theory and Related Fields, 1967
- On doubly stochastic Poisson processesMathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, 1964
- The stability of a queue with non-independent inter-arrival and service timesMathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, 1962