The Poisson Process Model - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 14
About This Presentation
Title:

The Poisson Process Model

Description:

The Smalltown postal branch employs a single clerk. ... arrive at this postal branch according to a Poisson process at rate 30 customers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:69
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 15
Provided by: lisa284
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Poisson Process Model


1
Example 14.2
  • The Poisson Process Model

2
Poisson Process
  • The Poisson distribution counts the number of
    events in a certain length of time.
  • There is a close relationship between the
    Exponential Distribution and the Poisson
    Distribution.

3
Background Information
  • The Smalltown postal branch employs a single
    clerk.
  • Customers arrive at this postal branch according
    to a Poisson process at rate 30 customers per
    hour, and the average service time is
    exponentially distributed with mean 1.5 minutes.
  • All arriving customers enter the branch,
    regardless of the number already waiting in line.

4
Background Information -- continued
  • The manager of the postal branch would ultimately
    like to decide whether to improve the system.
  • To do this, she first needs to develop a queuing
    model that describes the steady-state
    characteristics of the current system.

5
Solution
  • To begin, we must choose a common unit of time
    and then express the arrival and service rates (?
    and ?) in this unit.
  • We could measure time in seconds, minutes, hours,
    or any other convenient time unit, as long as we
    are consistent.
  • Here we will choose minutes. Then, because 1
    customer arrives every 2 minutes, ? ½. Also, ?
    0.667.

6
Solution -- continued
  • For the M/M/1 model, it turns out that the server
    utilization equals ?/?, the arrival rate divided
    by the service rate.
  • To ensure that the system is stable, we must
    require that the server utilization is less than
    1, so that the arrival rate is less than the
    services rate.
  • Otherwise, waiting lines will tend to grow
    indefinitely in the long run.
  • In general, the formulas for the M/M/1 model are
    somewhat complex. Therefore, we have implemented
    them in an M/M/1 template file.

7
MM1_TEMPLATE.XLS
  • This file contains the model.
  • The template is shown on the next slide.

8
(No Transcript)
9
Solution -- continued
  • We will not provide step-by-step instructions
    because we expect that you will use this as a
    template rather than enter the formulas yourself.
  • However, we make the following points.
  • All you need to enter are the inputs in B4
    through B6.
  • You can enter numbers for the rates in cells B5
    and B6, or you can base these on observed data.
    The data sheet exists in the template and can be
    seen on the next slide. Given such data, you
    would enter the formulas 1/Data!B5 and
    1/Data!C5 in cells B5 and B6 of the Template
    sheet.

10
(No Transcript)
11
Solution -- continued
  • The values in B5, B15 and B17 are related by the
    equation version of Littles formula.
  • The template is set up so that you can enter any
    value for the n in cell E11 to obtain the
    steady-state probability of n customers in the
    system in cell F11. You can even enter several
    values of n in cells E11, E12 and so on, and then
    copy the formula in cell F11 down for these
    values. Similarly, you can enter any time t in
    cell H11 and obtain the probability that a
    typical customer will wait in the queue at least
    time t in cell I11. The values of n and t shown
    are for illustration only.

12
Solution -- continued
  • From the template we see, for example, that when
    the arrival rate is 0.5 and the service rate is
    0.667, the expected number of customers in the
    queue is 2.25 and the expected time a typical
    customer spends in the queue is 4.5 minutes.
  • However 25 of all customers spend no time in the
    queue, while 53.7 spend more than 2 minutes in
    the queue.
  • Also, we see that the steady probability of
    having exactly 4 customers in the system is
    0.079. Equivalently, there are exactly 4
    customers in the system 7.9 of the time.

13
Solution -- continued
  • The bank manager can experiment with other
    arrival rates or services rates in cells B5 and
    B6 to see how the various output measures are
    affected.
  • One particularly important insight can be
    obtained through a data table.
  • The current server utilization is 0.75, and the
    system is behaving fairly well, with short waits
    in queue on average.
  • The data table, however, shows how bad things can
    get when the service rate is just barely above
    the arrival rate, so that the server utilization
    is just barley below 1.

14
Solution -- continued
  • The corresponding line chart shows that the
    expected time in queue increases extremely
    rapidly as the service rate approaches the
    arrival rate.
  • Whatever else the bank manager learns from this
    model, she now knows that she does not want a
    services rate close to the arrival rate, at least
    not for extended periods of time.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com