This book introduces a selection of communications network modelling disciplines such as network planning for transmission systems, modelling of SDH transport network structures and telecommunications network design, performance modelling, and much more.
Telecommunications Network Planning
β Scribed by Bernard Gendron, Teodor Gabriel Crainic (auth.), Brunilde SansΓ², Patrick Soriano (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 280
- Series
- Centre for Research on Transportation
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Telecommunications - central to our daily lives - continues to change dramatically. These changes are the result of technological advances, deregulation, the proliferation of broadband service offers, and the spectacular popularity of the Internet and wireless services. In such adynamic technological and economic environment, competition is increasing among service providers and among equipment manufacturers. Consequently, optimization of the planning process is becoming essential. Although telecommunications network planning has been tackled by the Operations Research community for some time, many fundamental problems remain challenging. Through its fourteen chapters, this book covers some new and some still challenging older problems which arise in the planning of telecommunication networks.
Telecommunications Network Planning will benefit both telecommunications practitioners looking for efficient methods to solve their problems and operations researchers interested in telecommunications. The book examines network design and dimensioning problems; it explores Operation Research issues related to a new standard Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM); it overviews problems that arise when designing survivable SDH/SONET Networks; it considers some broadband network problems; and it concludes with three chapters on wireless and mobile networks. Leading area researchers have contributed their recent research on the telecommunications and network topics treated in the volume.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xix
Multicommodity Capacitated Network Design....Pages 1-19
Using Hop-Indexed Models For Constrained Spanning and Steiner Tree Models....Pages 21-32
Hierarchical Two Level Location Problems....Pages 33-54
Multi-Hour Dimensioning In Non-Hierarchical Telecommunications Networks....Pages 55-78
Issues In ATM Network Planning: An Operations Research Perspective....Pages 79-99
The Common Structure of Packet - and Circuit-Switched Network Synthesis....Pages 101-119
Loss Models For Broadband Networks With Non-Linear Constraint Functions....Pages 121-134
Reliability Issues In Telecommunications Network Planning....Pages 135-146
Design and Dimensioning of Survivable SDH/Sonet Networks....Pages 147-167
Comparative Methods and Issues In Design of Mesh-Restorable STM and ATM Networks....Pages 169-200
Fault Tolerant Virtual Path Layout: Optimization Models....Pages 201-218
Survey of Research Issues In LEO/MEO Based Global Mobile Communication Systems....Pages 219-238
Mathematical Models and Exact Methods For Channel Assignment in Cellular Networks....Pages 239-255
Tile Covers, Closed Tours and The Radio Spectrum....Pages 257-270
β¦ Subjects
Business Information Systems; Computer Communication Networks; Regional/Spatial Science; Operation Research/Decision Theory
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
This book covers some of the major issues facing telecommunications network engineers and managers today. Topics covered include network planning for transmission systems, modelling of SDH transport network structures and telecommunications network design and performance modelling, as well as networ
<p><STRONG>Network Design and Management</STRONG> focuses on the latest methodological developments in three key areas---pricing of telecommunications services, network design, and resource allocation. These three elements are most relevant to current telecommunications planning. <P></P><P>The first
This new book explains how telecommunications networks work. It uses straightforward language supported by copious block - schematic diagrams so that non-engineers and engineers alike can learn about the principles of fixed and mobile telecommunications networks carrying voice and data. The book cov