|
Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
Congestion Control in Data Transmission Networks details the
modeling and control of data traffic in communication networks. It
shows how various networking phenomena can be represented in a
consistent mathematical framework suitable for rigorous formal
analysis. The monograph differentiates between fluid-flow
continuous-time traffic models, discrete-time processes with
constant sampling rates, and sampled-data systems with variable
discretization periods.
The authors address a number of difficult real-life problems, such
as:
optimal control of flows with disparate, time-varying delay;
the existence of source and channel nonlinearities;
the balancing of quality of service and fairness requirements; and
the incorporation of variable rate allocation policies.
Appropriate control mechanisms which can handle congestion and
guarantee high throughput in various traffic scenarios (with
different networking phenomena being considered) are proposed.
Systematic design procedures using sound control-theoretic
foundations are adopted. Since robustness issues are of major
concern in providing efficient data-flow regulation in today s
networks, sliding-mode control is selected as the principal
technique to be applied in creating the control solutions. The
controller derivation is given extensive analytical treatment and
is supported with numerous realistic simulations. A comparison with
existing solutions is also provided. The concepts applied are
discussed in a number of illustrative examples, and supported by
many figures, tables, and graphs walking the reader through the
ideas and introducing their relevance in real networks.
Academic researchers and graduate students working in computer
networks and telecommunications and in control (especially
time-delay systems and discrete-time optimal and sliding-mode
control) will find this text a valuable assistance in ensuring
smooth data-flow within communications networks."
Congestion Control in Data Transmission Networks details the
modeling and control of data traffic in communication networks. It
shows how various networking phenomena can be represented in a
consistent mathematical framework suitable for rigorous formal
analysis. The monograph differentiates between fluid-flow
continuous-time traffic models, discrete-time processes with
constant sampling rates, and sampled-data systems with variable
discretization periods. The authors address a number of difficult
real-life problems, such as: optimal control of flows with
disparate, time-varying delay; the existence of source and channel
nonlinearities; the balancing of quality of service and fairness
requirements; and the incorporation of variable rate allocation
policies. Appropriate control mechanisms which can handle
congestion and guarantee high throughput in various traffic
scenarios (with different networking phenomena being considered)
are proposed. Systematic design procedures using sound
control-theoretic foundations are adopted. Since robustness issues
are of major concern in providing efficient data-flow regulation in
today's networks, sliding-mode control is selected as the principal
technique to be applied in creating the control solutions. The
controller derivation is given extensive analytical treatment and
is supported with numerous realistic simulations. A comparison with
existing solutions is also provided. The concepts applied are
discussed in a number of illustrative examples, and supported by
many figures, tables, and graphs walking the reader through the
ideas and introducing their relevance in real networks. Academic
researchers and graduate students working in computer networks and
telecommunications and in control (especially time-delay systems
and discrete-time optimal and sliding-mode control) will find this
text a valuable assistance in ensuring smooth data-flow within
communications networks.
A principal objective of control engineering is to design
control systems which are robust with respect to external
disturbances and modelling uncertainty. This objective may be well
achieved using the sliding mode technique - which is the main
subject of this monograph. More precisely, Time-Varying Sliding
Modes for Second and Third Order Systems focuses on only one, but
very important aspect of the sliding mode system design, i.e. the
problem of the sliding plane selection. In this self-contained
monograph, the main notions and concepts used in the field of
variable structure systems and sliding mode control are presented
before in the main part the issue of the switching surface design
is discussed. This is done by considering two standard plants,
which are very often encountered in the control engineering
practice: the second and the third order nonlinear and possibly
time-varying systems.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|