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Markov chain
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===Queueing theory=== {{Main|Queueing theory}}Markov chains are the basis for the analytical treatment of queues ([[queueing theory]]). [[Agner Krarup Erlang]] initiated the subject in 1917.<ref name="MacTutor|id=Erlang">{{MacTutor|id=Erlang}}</ref> This makes them critical for optimizing the performance of telecommunications networks, where messages must often compete for limited resources (such as bandwidth).<ref name="CTCN">S. P. Meyn, 2007. [http://www.meyn.ece.ufl.edu/archive/spm_files/CTCN/MonographTocBib.pdf Control Techniques for Complex Networks] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150513155013/http://www.meyn.ece.ufl.edu/archive/spm_files/CTCN/MonographTocBib.pdf |date=2015-05-13}}, Cambridge University Press, 2007.</ref> Numerous queueing models use continuous-time Markov chains. For example, an [[M/M/1 queue]] is a CTMC on the non-negative integers where upward transitions from ''i'' to ''i'' + 1 occur at rate ''Ξ»'' according to a [[Poisson process]] and describe job arrivals, while transitions from ''i'' to ''i'' β 1 (for ''i'' > 1) occur at rate ''ΞΌ'' (job service times are exponentially distributed) and describe completed services (departures) from the queue.
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