[Operations Research/Computer Science Interfaces] The Vehicle Routing Problem: Latest Advances and New Challenges Volume 43 || Health Care Logistics, Emergency Preparedness, and Disaster Relief: New Challenges for Routing Problems with a Focus on the Austrian Situation
β Scribed by Golden, Bruce; Raghavan, S.; Wasil, Edward
- Book ID
- 121497659
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 455 KB
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Article
- ISBN
- 0387777784
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Theoretical research and practical applications in the ?eld of vehicle routing started in 1959 with the truck dispatching problem posed by Dantzig and Ramser [1]: ?nd the β. . . optimum routing of a ?eet of gasoline delivery trucks between a bulk terminal and a large number of service stations supplied by the terminal. β Using a method based on a linear programming formulation, their hand calculations produced a near-optimal solution with four routes to aproblemwithtwelve service stations. The authorsproclaimed:βNopractical applications of the method have been made as yet. β In the nearly 50 years since the Dantzig and Ramser paper appeared, work in the ?eld has exploded dramatically. Today, a Google Scholar search of the words vehicle routing problem (VRP) yields more than 21,700 entries. The June 2006 issue of OR/MS Today provided a survey of 17 vendors of commercial routing software whose packages are currently capable of solving average-size problems with 1,000 stops, 50 routes, and two-hour hard-time windows in two to ten minutes [2]. In practice, vehicle routing may be the single biggest success story in operations research. For example, each day 103,500 drivers at UPS follow computer-generated routes. The drivers visit 7. 9 million customers and handle an average of 15. 6 million packages [3].
π SIMILAR VOLUMES