A large dam model is the object of study of this paper. The parameters Llower and Lupper define its lower and upper levels,
L = Lupper - Llower is large, and if the current level of water is between these bounds, the dam is assumed to be in a normal state. Passage across one or other of the levels leads to damage. Let J1 and J2 denote the damage costs of crossing the lower and, respectively, the upper levels. It is assumed that the input stream of water is described by a Poisson process, while the output stream is state dependent. Let Lt denote the dam level at time t, and let p1 = limt→∞P{Lt = Llower} and p2 = limt→∞P{Lt > Lupper} exist. The long-run average cost,
J = p1J1 + p2J2, is a performance measure. The aim of the paper is to choose the parameter controlling the output stream so as to minimize J.
In the present paper we define conservative and semiconservative random walks in Z d and study different families of random walks. The family of symmetric random walks is one of the families of conservative random walks, and simple (Pólya) random walks are their representatives. The classification of random walks given in the present paper enables us to provide a new approach to random walks in Z d by reduction to birth-and-death processes. We construct nontrivial examples of recurrent random walks in Z d for any d ≥ 3 and transient random walks in Z 2 .
This paper consists of two parts. The first part provides a more elementary proof of the asymptotic theorem of the refusals stream for an M/GI/1/n queueing system discussed in Abramov (1991a). The central property of the refusals stream discussed in the second part of this paper is that, if the expectations of interarrival and service time of an M/GI/1/n queueing system are equal to each other, then the expectation of the number of refusals during a busy period is equal to 1. This property is extended for a wide family of single-server queueing systems with refusals including, for example, queueing systems with bounded waiting time.
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