Proceedings: Aug. 8-13, 1982, Montreal, Canada 2 Analog/hybrid computation, simulators, discrete systems, modeling and simulation, modeling and simulation in bio and environmental sciences
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Format: | Tagungsbericht Buch |
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | VIII, 300 S. |
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adam_text | TENTH IMACS CONGRESS PROCEEDINGS VOLUME II GROUP IV: ANALOG/HYBRID
COMPULATION GROUP V: SIMULATORS GROUP VI: DISCRETE SYSTEMS SIMULATION
GROUP VII: MODELING AND SIMULATION IN BIO AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES 10
TH IMACS WORLD CONGRESS AUGUST 8-13, 1982 VOLUME 2 SPONSORS IMACS
(INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR MATHEMATICS AND COMPUTERS IN SIMULATION)
CONCORDIA UNIVERSITY, CANADA IAAM (INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR
MATHEMATICAL MODELLING) ISCME (INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY FOR COMPUTATIONAL
METHODS IN ENGINEERING) JSST (JAPANESE SOCIETY FOR SIMULATION
TECHNOLOGY) SIMS (SCANDINAVIAN SIMULATION SOCIETY) SCS (SOCIETY FOR
COMPUTER SIMULATION) NSERC (NATURAL SCIENCES AND ENGINEERING RESEARCH
COUNCIL, CANADA) CICS (CANADIAN INDUSTRIAL COMPUTER SOCIETY) PRINTED IN
CANADA TIB/UB HANNOVER 89 128 789 212 CONTENTS VOLUME TWO INTRODUCTION
TO THE SESSION ON THE USER S EXPERIENCE IN HYBIRD COMPUTATION P. VAN
REMOORTERE, E.R.M.-ELECTRICITY, BELGIUM 1 SIMULATION OF THE SECONDARY
COOLING SYSTEM OF A NUCLEAR POWER PLANT R.M. HUBER, R.A. JUAN AND R. 0.
FERNANDEZ, INSTITUTO DE CIBERNSTICA-UNIVERSIDAD POLITSCNICA, SPAIN . . 3
THE OPERATION OF A HYBIRD COMPUTER SYSTEM USING A SIMULATION LANGUAGE R.
TRIER, M.A.N. MASCHINENFABRIK, GERMANY . . . . 7 HYBRID COMPUTING
EVALUATION OF 10 YEARS EXPERIENCE IN A UNIVERSITY ENVIRONMENT L.
BOULLART, STATE UNIVERSITY OF GHENT, BELGIUM 9 HYBRID COMPUTATION -
TODAY AND TOMORROW P. VALISALO, UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA, U.S.A 13 HYBRID
COMPUTER MODELING OF AN ENERGY CONSERVING SYSTEM B.D. SIVAZLIAN AND P.E.
VALISALO, UNIVERISTY OF FLORIDA, U.S.A 14 A HYBRID COMPUTER ALGORITHM
FOR TEMPERATURE DISTRIBUTION ANALYSIS OF IRREGULAR TWO DIMENSIONAL
SHAPES P. VALISALO, D. BERGQUIST AND V. UCGVEW, UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA,
U.S.A 17 HYBRID COMPUTER SIX DEGREE-OF-FREEDOM HARDWARE-IN-THE-LOOP
SIMULATION OF A LASER GUIDED BOMB W.H. CHRISTAL, TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
INCORPORATED, U.S.A 20 HYBRID SIMULATION OF A MICROPROCESSOR CONTROLLED
MULTI-CONVERTOR ELECTRIC POWER CONDITIONING SYSTEM H. WINARNO, J. JALADE
AND J.P. GOUYON, LABORATOIRE D AUTOMATIQUE ET D ANALYSE DES SYST&NES DU
C.N.F.S. , FRANCE 23 HYBRID SIMULATION AND OPTIMIZATION OF A DC-SQUID R.
LLURBA AND J.J.P. BRUINES, DELFT UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY, THE
NETHERLANDS 26 APPLICATION OF COMBINED (CONTINUOUS MEDIUM-NETWORK) AND
NETWORK ELECTRIC ANALOGS FOR HEAT TRANSFER PROCESSES RESEARCH L.A.
KOZDOBA, UKRAINIAN SSR ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, KIEV 29 HYBRID SIMULATION OF
111 - POSSED IDENTIFICATION FIELD PROBLEMS A. CZERWIFISKA, POLISH
ACADEMY OF SCIENCEE,POLAND 33 DIRECT-INDIRECT ANALOG HYBRID SIMULATOR N.
SARYAL, MIDDLE EAST TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY, TURKEY 36 DIGITALLY CONTROLLED
DIELECTRIC HEATING SYSTEM AND SIMULATION OF ITS BEHAVIOUR D.M. VAN
DOMMELEN AND P.F. STEFENS, KATHOLIEKE UNIVEVSITEIT LEUVEN, BELGIUM- 38
ANALOG MODELS OF HIGH-PRESSURE GAS TRANSMISSION LINES J. K. VAN VEEN, S.
R. REINTSEMA, GASUNIE RESEARCH LABORATORY, THE NETHERLANDS 41
ASYNCHRONOUS MOTOR SIMULATION BY A DIGITAL DIFFERENTIAL ANALYSER A.
BACCIGALUPI, UNIVERSITY DI NAPOLI AND C. SANGES, CENTRO DI STUDIO SUI
CALAOLATORI IBRIDI - C.N.R. ITALY 44 PWICE PROGRAMMING METHODOLOGY A.
BAACIGALUPI, UNIVERSITY DI NAPOLI AND C. SANGES, CENTRO DI STUDIO SUI
CALAOLATORI IBRIDI - C.N.R. ITALY 47 A PORTABLE REAL TIME CONTROL AND
SIMULATION SYSTEM C. T H I B A U T , J - P . C A L V E S , A N D Y. T
H O M A S , U. I . T. / L A B O R A T O I R E D A U T O M A T I Q U E
D E I E . N . S . M . , F R A N C E . . . . 5 0 MATHEMATICAL
SIMULATION OF THE ELECTRIC ARC-TEST CIRCUITLNTERACTION IN THE PARTICULAR
CASE OF THE SYNTHETIC TESTING M. SASU, RESEARCH INSTITUTE FOR THE
ELECTROTECHNICAL INDUSTRY ICFE, ROMANIA 54 NON-LINEAR ANALYSIS AND
SIMULATIONS OF AUTO-OSCILLATIONS OF TWIN BUNDLE CONDUCTORS OF
TRANSMISSION LINES A.R.E. OLIVEIRAANDW.M. MANSOUR FEDERAL UNIVERSITY OF
RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL 58 DIGITAL SIMULATION OF AN OPTIMAL FLIGHT
GUIDANCE AND CONTROL COMPUTER SYSTEM C-F. LIN AND K.L. HSU, THE
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN, U.S.A 61 COMB FILTERS - SIMULATION AND DESIGN
A.T. KOSSIDAS AND S.A. PACTITIS, BIGHER TECHNICAL EDUCATION COLLEGE,
GREECE 64 OVERVIEW OF THE ROSS SIMULATION SYSTEM P. KLAHR, THE RAND
CORPORATION, U.S.A 67 VISUAL SYSTEMS IN FLIGHT SIMULATION R. MCLANAGHAN,
THE SINGER COMPANY, U.S.A *...-. 70 FLIGHT SIMULATOR INSTRUCTOR
STATIONS: CONTROLLING THE TRAINING PROBLEM E.R. PERRY, THE SINGER
COMPANY, U.S.A *...-... 73 HUMAN FACTORS IN FLIGHT SIMULATOR DEVELOPMENT
E.A. STARK, THE SINGER COMPANY, U.S.A 76 USING DISCRETE SIMULATION TO
TEACH ABOUT OPERATING SYSTEMS CM. SHUB, UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT, U.S.A 79
FRONTIERS OF MODELING FOR SIMULATORS A.B. CLYMER, AUTODYNAMICS, INC.,
U.S.A * . * . 82 AN ADVANCED SIMULATOR REACTOR CORE SYSTEM MODEL T-C.
CHAN, WESTINGHOUSE ELECTRIC CORPORATION, U.S.A * . * . 84 SURVEY OF
COMPUTER CODES FOR REACTOR TRANSIENT SIMULATION ANALYSIS P. G. BAILEY,
ELECTRIC POWER RESEARCH INSTITUTE, U.S.A 87 CHALLENGES TO SIMULATION
SOFTWARE - AN OVERVIEW W.D. WADE, WADE ENGINEERING, P.C., U.S.A * . * .
90 APPLICATION SOFTWARE DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS FOR A CANDU NUCLEAR
GENERATING STATION TRAINING SIMULATOR . S. G. CHOW, K. L. POON AND R. M.
DAVIS, ONTARIO HYDRO, CANADA * . * . 92 REAL-TIME SIMULATION OF A
CONDENSATE/FEEDWATER FLOW SYSTEM L.E. BOWER, P.K. LU AND K.C. CHEUNG,
GOULD INC., U.S.A . . . 95 VALIDATION OF MODELS FOR NUCLEAR TRAINING
SIMULATORS T.W. KERLIN, UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE AND ANALYSIS AND
MEASUREMENT SERVICES, U.S.A. 98 SIMULATORS FOR EDUCATION AND TRAINING
R.M. MASLO, ELECTRONIC ASSOCIATES, INC., U.S.A 101 ONTARIO HYDRO S
TRAINING SIMULATOR PROGRAM FOR NUCLEAR GENERATING STATIONS G.T.
BEREZNAI, ONTARIO HYDRO, CANADA 103 MITAGS - THE VANTAGE POINT OF
SIMULATION TRAINING M.H. CARPENTER, U.S.A 106 SIMULATION INITIALIZATION
BIAS: THE CURRENT STATE L.W. SCHRUBEN, CORNELL UNIVERSITY, U.S.A 109
MODEL VALIDATION: THE CURRENT STATE R.G. SARGENT, SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY,
U.S.A 112 SIMULATION LANGUAGES A.A.B. PRITSKER, PRITSKER & ASSOCIATES,
INC., U.S.A 115 IV ADVANCED CONCEPTS AND CAPABILITIES FOR THE ANALYSIS
OF SIMULATION OUTPUT C.R. STANDRIDGE AND A.A.B. PRITSKER, PRITSKER AND
ASSOCIATES INC., U.S.A 116 USING MICROCOMPUTERS IN SIMULATION STUDIES
G.B. WHITEHOUSE, D.G. LINTON, C.A. DAVIS AND J.C. MACK, UNIVERSITY OF
CENTRAL FLORIDA, U.S.A 119 CAPACITY PLANNING: A CASE STUDY USING
SIMULATION K.J. ENGEMANN, M.- GILMARTIN AND B. MZCLSOD, IONA COLLEGE,
U.S.A 122 THE IMPACT OF COMPUTER BASED HUMAN COMMUNICATION AND DECISION
SUPPORT SYSTEMS ON SIMULATION AND MODELING ACCEPTANCE J.M. SCHER, NEW
JERSEY INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY, U.S.A 125 DETERMINING AN OPTIMAL DRUGS
INVENTORY POLICY: A SIMULATION APPROACH N. FINGER, A. MEHREZ, BEN GURION
UNIVERSITY, ISRAEL, N. FRAIMAN, INTERNATIONAL PAPER COMPANY, U.S.A. AND
M. MOHL, SETON BALL UNIVERSITY, U.S.A 129 STATISTICAL ISSUES IN
SIMULATION P.P. TUNER, UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, U.S.A 132 MODERN AND EASY
GENERATION OF RANDOM NUMBERS/TESTING.OF RANDOM NUMBER GENERATORS WITH
TESTRAND E.J. DUDEWICZ AND T.G. BAILEY, THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY, U.S.A
133 A SIMULATION STUDY OF TRANSFORMATIONS IN DISCRIMINANT ANALYSIS J.H.
SCHUENEMEYER AND G.V. JOGLEKAR, UNIVERSITY OF DELEWARE, U.S.A. 136 A
NOTE ON RANDOM NUMBER GENERATION UNDER TIME AND SPACE CONSTRAINTS L.A.
RAMSHAW AND P.O. AMER, UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, U.S.A 139 NUMERICAL
SYNTHESIS OF DYNAMIC EQUATIONS OF MOTION AND THEIR APPLICATION TO A
CRAWLER TRACTOR Z. GORAJ, INSTITUTE OF AIRCRAFT ENGINEERING AND APPLIED
MECHANICS POLYTECHNIC OF WARSAW, POLAND, AND E. IGRAS, RESEARCH AND
DEVELOPMENT CENTER AT INDUSTRIAL COMBINE HUTA STALOOA WOLA , POLAND . .
. 142 MODERN TRAINING OF PROCESS OPERATORS THE AUTODYNAMICS MODEL 1501
PROCESS SIMULATOR W.A. HALLEMEYER, AUTODYNAMICS, INC., U.S.A 145
SIMULATION IN THE DESIGN OF ROBOT CONTROLS J.R. HEWIT AND N. TAN,
UNIVERSITY OF NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE, U.K 148 COMPUTER AID DESIGN AND
OPTIMIZATION OF A SMALL TRACK RETARDER S. JANJANIN, S. MIHID AND R.
JOVANOVID, YUGOSLAVIA 151 ANALYSIS AND DESIGN OF LEAF-SPRING FLEXIBLE
JOINTS FOR DRIVING GYROSCOPIC ROTORS J.L. SCIESZKO AND W.M. MANSOUR,
FEDERAL UNIVERSITY OF RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL 155 NUMERICAL AND
EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATIONS OF THE PULSE WAVE RESPONSE OF A NECKED ROD
M. ZINDELUK, FEDERAL UNIVERSITY OF RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL 157 SIMULATION
MODELING AS AN AID TO CASTING PLANT DESIGN FOR AN ALUMINUM SMELTER J.R.
GROSS, MILLIKIN UNIVERSITY, U.S.A., S.M. HARE, PRITSKER & ASSOCIATES,
INC., U.S.A. AND S. ROY, ALCAN INTERNATIONAL, LTD., U.S.A 160 A DISCRETE
SIMULATION OF THE COKE PLANT AT ALGOMA STEEL R.J. MCFARLANE, THE ALGOMA
STEEL CORPORATION, LIMITED, CANADA 162 SOME THOUGHTS ON DISCRETE
SIMULATION A. JDVOR, HUNGARIAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, HUNGARY 165 DIGITAL
SIMULATION OF CRUCIFORM VEHICLES WITH GYROSCOPIC STABILIZATION E.A.
AUGUSTO AND A. SATO, AEROSPACE TECHNICAL CENTER IAE/CTA, BRAZIL 166 ON
SIMULATING NEWSPAPER DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS L.J. BAIN AND D.S. JOSHI,
ROCKWELL INTERNATIONAL, U.S.A 169 COMPUTER SIMULATION OF DECENTRALIZED
ECONOMIC SYSTEM WITH DIFFERENT CRITERIA G. FRIDMAN, UNIVERSITY OF HAIFA,
ISRAEL 172 MODELLING CONSTRUCTS OF SIMSCRIPT II.5 B.C. RUSSELL, CACI,
U.S.A 175 DUAL NATURE OF EVENTS IN DISCRETE SIMULATION A. JDVOR,
HUNGARIAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, HUNGARY 177 AN OVERVIEW OF THE BIOMEDICAL
MATHEMATICAL MODELING SYMPOSIUM J. EISENFELD, THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT
ARLINGTON, U.S.A. AND V.C. RIDEOUT, UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON,
U.S.A 180 CONSTRUCTION AND EFFECTIVE USE OF COMPLEX BIOLOGICAL MODELS D.
GARFINKEL, UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, U.S.A 181 SIMILARITY PRINCIPLES
AND THEIR ROLE IN BIOMEDICAL MODELLING R.ROSEN, DALHOUSIE UNIVERSITY,
CANADA 184 THE INVERSE PROBLEM FOR COMPARTMENTAL SYSTEMS J.A. JACQUEZ,
THE UNIVERISTY OF MICHIGAN, U.S.A 136 A SKELETON OF PHYSICAL IDEAS FOR
THE DYNAMICS OF COMPLEX SYSTEMS F.E. YATES AND A.S. IBERALL, CRUMP
INSTITUTE FOR MEDICAL ENGINEERING, U.S.A 190 NETWORK THERMODYNAMIC
SIMULATION OF BIOLOGICAL SYSTEMS: AN OVERVIEW D.C. MIKULECKY, VIRGINIA
COMMONWEALTH UNIVERSITY, U.S.A 194 PERCEPTION AS AN ACTIVE PROCESS K.H.
NORWICH, UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO, CANADA 197 OPTIMAL MULTICOMPARTMENTAL
SAMPLING DESIGNSFOR PARAMETER ESTIMATION - PRACTICAL ASPECTS OF THE
IDENTIFICATION PROBLEM E.M. LANDAW, UCLA SCHOOL OF MEDICINE, U.S.A. . .
200 EXPERIENCE WITH SEQUENTIAL OPTIMAL SAMPLING SCHEDULE DESIGNS FOR
PHARMACOKINETIC AND PHYSIOLOGIC EXPERIMENTS J.J. DISTEFANO, III,
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, U.S.A 20 3 ON THE STATISTICAL MOMENTS
TRANSFORMATION IN PHARMACOKINETIC MODELS: A COMPARISON OF THE RATE
PARAMETER AND THE MEAN RESIDENCE TIME ESTIMATES J.H. MATIS, D.R. OLSON,
TEXAS ASM UNIVERSITY, U.S.A. AND K.B. GERALD, UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
U.S.A. 206 STOCHASTIC VERSUS DETERMINISTIC G.S. LADDE, UNIVERSITY OF
TEXAS AT ARLINGTON, U.S.A. . : . . 209 IS DETERMINISTIC IDENTIFLABILITY
A FRAUD? G.A. BEKEY AND F.Y. HADAEGH, UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA,
U.S.A 211 MODELLING METABOLIC AND ENDOCRINE SYSTEMS: AN INTEGRATED
APPRAOCH TO MODEL FORMULATION, IDENTIFICATION AND VALIDATION C. COBELLI,
UNIVERSITY DI PADOVA, ITALY, E.R. CARSON, THE CITY UNIVERSITY, LONDON,
AND ROYAL FREE HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF MEDICINE, LONDON AND L. FINKELSTEIN,
THE CITY UNIVERSITY, LONDON 214 AN APPROACH TO THE PROBLEM OF LINEAR
SYSTEM IDENTIFIABILITY THROUGH THE INVESTIGATION OF STRUCTURAL
PROPERTIES OF THE CONNECTION, INJECTION AND OBSERVATION MATRICES J.
DELFORGE, CEN/SACLAY, FRANCE 217 IDENTIFIABILITY TESTING FOR LINEAR AND
NONLINEAR STATE SPACE MODELS E. WALTER, CNRS/ESE, FRANCE 220 PARAMETER
IDENTIFIABILITY FOR PARTIAL DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS C.C. TRAVIS, OAK
RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY, U.S.A. AND L.W. WHITE, UNIVERSITY OF
OKLAHOMA, U.S.A. . . 223 VI STRUCTURAL IDENTIFIABILITY CRITERIA FOR
LARGE LINEAR AND NONLINEAR COMPARTMENTAL SYSTEMS J. EISENFE.14, THE
UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT ARLINGTON, U.S.A 225 ROLE OF IDENTIFIABILITY IN
VALIDATION OF COMPARTMENTAL MODELS R.F. BROWN, UNIVERSITY OF NEW SCMTH
WALES, AUSTRALIA, 229 IDENTIFICATION OF TIME SERIES AND COMPARTMENTAL
MODELS D.H. ANDERSON AND E.C. GARTLAND, JR., SOUTHERN METHODIST
UNIVERSITY, U.S.A 232 PARAMETER ESTIMATION ON A MODEL OF THE SYSTEMIC
ARTERIAL SYSTEM J.W. CLARK, RICE UNIVERSITY, U.S-A. AND R.A. PAULSEN,
SANDIA LABORATORIES, U.S.A 235 MODEL STUDIES OF BLOOD PRESSURE AND FLOW
AND OF OXYGEN TRANSPORT IN INFANTS WITH TRANSPOSITION OF THE GREAT
ARTERIES E.H. BLACKSTONE, THE UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA IN BIRMINGHAM,
U.S.A. AND V.C. RIDEOUT, UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON, U.S.A. 236
SADDLE POINT BEHAVIOUR FOR A REACTION - DIFFUSION SYSTEM. APPLICATION TO
A CLASS OF EPIDEMIC MODELS V. CAPASSO AND L. MADDALENA, ISTITUTO DI
ANALISI MATEMATICA, ITALY 237 FEATURE EXTRACTION AND AUTO-REGRESSIVE
SIMULATION OF HEPATIC DISORDERED STATES BASED ON TIME-SERIESED CLINICAL
LABORATORY DATA H. MORI, K. OHTAKE, S. SAWAI, T. MINEYAMA, K. RYU, A.
TAKEKAWA, S. KITAMURA, KOBE UNIVERSITY, JAPAN AND T. ONO, OSAKA
PREFECTNZ AL UNIVERSITY, JAPAN 241 PROPOSAL OF OPTIMUM DRUG DOSAGE BY
MEANS OF SIMULATION PHARMACOKINETICS MODELS J. POTUCEK, V. BRODAN AND T.
SECHSER, INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL MEDICINE AND ORGANIZATION OF HEALTH
SERVICES AND INSTITUTE FOR CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE,
CZECHOSLOVAKIA 244 ANALYSIS OF THE COMPLIANCE DESCRIPTOR FOR LEFT
VENTRICULAR PUMPING W.A. RYAN, JR., F.P. PELUSO, W.S. FOPHAM, S.D.
ALLEN, J. MELBIN AND A. NOORDERGRAFF, UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA AND
UNIVERSITY OF UTAH, U.S.A 247 MODELS AND CLINICAL APPLICATION J.E.W.
BENEKENAND T. STAPPER, EINDHOVEN UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY, THE
NETHERLANDS 252 TREND DETECTION IN PHYSIOLOGICAL SIGNALS J.E.W. BENEKEN,
EINDHOVEN UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY, THE NETHERLANDS 253 SIMULATION AND
PREDICTION OF CLINICAL STATES OF LEUKEMIA BY THE AUTO-REGRESSION MODEL
H. MORI, S. KITAMURA, T. NAGAOKA, A. TAKEKAWA AND FL. TAMAGTIAHI, KOBE
UNIVERSITY, JAPAN 254 SOFTWARE FOR SOLVING IDENTIFICATION AND
IDENTIFIABILITY PROBLEMS, E.G. IN COMPARTMENTAL SYSTEMS H. POHJANPALO
ARD B. WAHLSTROM, TECHNICAL RESEARCH CENTRE OF FINLAND, FINLAND 257
PROGNOSTIC MODEL OF STATE OF MARINE ECOSYSTEMS APPLIED TO FISHERY A.S.
VASIL EV, G.N. DEINEGA AND F-T. FEDOTOV, MARINE HYDROPHYSICAL INSTITUTE
ACADEMY OF SCIENCES UK.SSR, USSR 260 THEORETICAL BACKGROUND FOR THE
SIMULATION OF MARINE SYSTEM DYNAMICS V.I. BELYAEV, MARINE HYDROPHYSICAL
INSTITUTE ACADEMY OF SCIENCES UK.SSR, USSR . 263 GRID GENERATION FOR
ENVIRONMENTAL FLOWS W.C. THACKER, ATLANTIC OOEONOGXAPHIA AND
METEOROLOGICAL LABORATORIES, U.S.A 266 MODELING THERMAL PLUMES IN TIDAL
RIVERS J. HAUSER, D. EPPEL, M. LOBMEYF, A. FLEHLSEN AND A. MULLER, GKSS
RESEARCH CENTER, CERMANY AND F. TANZER, UN IVERSITAT GIESSEN, GERMANY
270 MATHEMATICAL MODELING OF COOLING TOWER PLUMES R. CARHART, UNIVERSITY
OF ILLINOIS CHICAGO CIRCLE, U.S.A. AND A. POLICASTRO, ARGONR.E NATIONAL
LABORATORY, U.S.A 274 VII GEOHYDROCHEMICAL MODELS: USES IN THE ELECTRIC
UTILITY INDUSTRY I.P. MURARKA, ELECTRIC POWER RESEARCH INSTITUTE, U.S.A
277 _ TRANSPORT OF WATER AND SOLUTES IN SOILS L. BOERSMA, M.L. LINGS,
AND E.L. MCCOY, OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY, U.S.A 280 THE USE OF ASYMPTOTIC
EXPANSIONS TO DETERMINE THE SHORT- AND-LONG TERM LEACHING BEHAVIORS OF
NUCLEAR WASTE FORMS C. PESCATORE AND A.J. MAAHIELS, UNIVERSITY OF
ILLINOIS, U.S.A 283 THERMOMECHANICAL PROBLEMS IN NUCLEAR WASTE USING THE
EXPLICIT FINITE-DIFFERENCE METHOD R. HOFMANN, SCIENCE APPLICATIONS,
INC., U.S.A 286 THE DEVELOPMENT AND APPLICATION OF A GEOLOGIC SIMULATION
MODEL M.G. FOLEY, PACIFIC NORTHWEST LABORATORY, U.S.A 288 APPLICATION OF
SYSTEMS VARIABILITY ANALYSIS TO ASSESS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS IN THE
CANADIAN NUCLEAR FUEL WASTE MANAGEMENT PROGRAM T.H. ANDRES, ATOMIC
ENERGY OF CANADA LIMITED, CANADA 291 A THREE DIMENSIONAL HYBRID FINITE
ELEMENT-FINITE DIFFERENCE SCHEME FOR GROUNDWATER SIMULATION D.K. BABU
AND G.F. FINDER, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY, U.S.A., O.K. SUNADA, COLORADO
STATE UNIVERSITY, U.S.A 292 THE PRINCIPAL DIRECTION TECHNIQUE FOR
SOLUTION OF THE ADVECTION-DISPERSON EQUATION E.O. FRIND, UNIVERSITY OF
WATERLOO, CANADA AND G.F. FINDER, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY, U.S.A 295
NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF SUBSURFACE ENERGY STORAGE PROBLEMS P.S.
HUYAKORN, D.E. DOUGHERTY AND C.R. FAUST, GEOTRANS, INC., U.S.A 296
COLLOCATION SIMULATOR FOR A SYSTEM OF COUPLED TRANSPORT OPERATORS V. V.
NGUYEN, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY, U.S.A 300
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adam_txt |
TENTH IMACS CONGRESS PROCEEDINGS VOLUME II GROUP IV: ANALOG/HYBRID
COMPULATION GROUP V: SIMULATORS GROUP VI: DISCRETE SYSTEMS SIMULATION
GROUP VII: MODELING AND SIMULATION IN BIO AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES 10
TH IMACS WORLD CONGRESS AUGUST 8-13, 1982 VOLUME 2 SPONSORS IMACS
(INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR MATHEMATICS AND COMPUTERS IN SIMULATION)
CONCORDIA UNIVERSITY, CANADA IAAM (INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR
MATHEMATICAL MODELLING) ISCME (INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY FOR COMPUTATIONAL
METHODS IN ENGINEERING) JSST (JAPANESE SOCIETY FOR SIMULATION
TECHNOLOGY) SIMS (SCANDINAVIAN SIMULATION SOCIETY) SCS (SOCIETY FOR
COMPUTER SIMULATION) NSERC (NATURAL SCIENCES AND ENGINEERING RESEARCH
COUNCIL, CANADA) CICS (CANADIAN INDUSTRIAL COMPUTER SOCIETY) PRINTED IN
CANADA TIB/UB HANNOVER 89 128 789 212 CONTENTS VOLUME TWO INTRODUCTION
TO THE SESSION ON THE USER'S EXPERIENCE IN HYBIRD COMPUTATION P. VAN
REMOORTERE, E.R.M.-ELECTRICITY, BELGIUM 1 SIMULATION OF THE SECONDARY
COOLING SYSTEM OF A NUCLEAR POWER PLANT R.M. HUBER, R.A. JUAN AND R. 0.
FERNANDEZ, INSTITUTO DE CIBERNSTICA-UNIVERSIDAD POLITSCNICA, SPAIN . . 3
THE OPERATION OF A HYBIRD COMPUTER SYSTEM USING A SIMULATION LANGUAGE R.
TRIER, M.A.N. MASCHINENFABRIK, GERMANY . . . . 7 HYBRID COMPUTING
EVALUATION OF 10 YEARS EXPERIENCE IN A UNIVERSITY ENVIRONMENT L.
BOULLART, STATE UNIVERSITY OF GHENT, BELGIUM 9 HYBRID COMPUTATION -
TODAY AND TOMORROW P. VALISALO, UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA, U.S.A 13 HYBRID
COMPUTER MODELING OF AN ENERGY CONSERVING SYSTEM B.D. SIVAZLIAN AND P.E.
VALISALO, UNIVERISTY OF FLORIDA, U.S.A 14 A HYBRID COMPUTER ALGORITHM
FOR TEMPERATURE DISTRIBUTION ANALYSIS OF IRREGULAR TWO DIMENSIONAL
SHAPES P. VALISALO, D. BERGQUIST AND V. UCGVEW, UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA,
U.S.A 17 HYBRID COMPUTER SIX DEGREE-OF-FREEDOM HARDWARE-IN-THE-LOOP
SIMULATION OF A LASER GUIDED BOMB W.H. CHRISTAL, TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
INCORPORATED, U.S.A 20 HYBRID SIMULATION OF A MICROPROCESSOR CONTROLLED
MULTI-CONVERTOR ELECTRIC POWER CONDITIONING SYSTEM H. WINARNO, J. JALADE
AND J.P. GOUYON, LABORATOIRE D'AUTOMATIQUE ET D'ANALYSE DES SYST&NES DU
C.N.F.S. , FRANCE 23 HYBRID SIMULATION AND OPTIMIZATION OF A DC-SQUID R.
LLURBA AND J.J.P. BRUINES, DELFT UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY, THE
NETHERLANDS 26 APPLICATION OF COMBINED (CONTINUOUS MEDIUM-NETWORK) AND
NETWORK ELECTRIC ANALOGS FOR HEAT TRANSFER PROCESSES RESEARCH L.A.
KOZDOBA, UKRAINIAN SSR ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, KIEV 29 HYBRID SIMULATION OF
111 - POSSED IDENTIFICATION FIELD PROBLEMS A. CZERWIFISKA, POLISH
ACADEMY OF SCIENCEE,POLAND 33 DIRECT-INDIRECT ANALOG HYBRID SIMULATOR N.
SARYAL, MIDDLE EAST TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY, TURKEY 36 DIGITALLY CONTROLLED
DIELECTRIC HEATING SYSTEM AND SIMULATION OF ITS BEHAVIOUR D.M. VAN
DOMMELEN AND P.F. STEFENS, KATHOLIEKE UNIVEVSITEIT LEUVEN, BELGIUM- 38
ANALOG MODELS OF HIGH-PRESSURE GAS TRANSMISSION LINES J. K. VAN VEEN, S.
R. REINTSEMA, GASUNIE RESEARCH LABORATORY, THE NETHERLANDS 41
ASYNCHRONOUS MOTOR SIMULATION BY A DIGITAL DIFFERENTIAL ANALYSER A.
BACCIGALUPI, UNIVERSITY DI NAPOLI AND C. SANGES, CENTRO DI STUDIO SUI
CALAOLATORI IBRIDI - C.N.R. ITALY 44 PWICE PROGRAMMING METHODOLOGY A.
BAACIGALUPI, UNIVERSITY DI NAPOLI AND C. SANGES, CENTRO DI STUDIO SUI
CALAOLATORI IBRIDI - C.N.R. ITALY 47 A PORTABLE REAL TIME CONTROL AND
SIMULATION SYSTEM C. T H I B A U T , J - P . C A L V E S , A N D Y. T
H O M A S , U. I . T. / L A B O R A T O I R E D ' A U T O M A T I Q U E
D E I ' E . N . S . M . , F R A N C E . . . . 5 0 MATHEMATICAL
SIMULATION OF THE ELECTRIC ARC-TEST CIRCUITLNTERACTION IN THE PARTICULAR
CASE OF THE SYNTHETIC TESTING M. SASU, RESEARCH INSTITUTE FOR THE
ELECTROTECHNICAL INDUSTRY ICFE, ROMANIA 54 NON-LINEAR ANALYSIS AND
SIMULATIONS OF AUTO-OSCILLATIONS OF TWIN BUNDLE CONDUCTORS OF
TRANSMISSION LINES A.R.E. OLIVEIRAANDW.M. MANSOUR FEDERAL UNIVERSITY OF
RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL 58 DIGITAL SIMULATION OF AN OPTIMAL FLIGHT
GUIDANCE AND CONTROL COMPUTER SYSTEM C-F. LIN AND K.L. HSU, THE
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN, U.S.A 61 COMB FILTERS - SIMULATION AND DESIGN
A.T. KOSSIDAS AND S.A. PACTITIS, BIGHER TECHNICAL EDUCATION COLLEGE,
GREECE 64 OVERVIEW OF THE ROSS SIMULATION SYSTEM P. KLAHR, THE RAND
CORPORATION, U.S.A 67 VISUAL SYSTEMS IN FLIGHT SIMULATION R. MCLANAGHAN,
THE SINGER COMPANY, U.S.A *.-. 70 FLIGHT SIMULATOR INSTRUCTOR
STATIONS: CONTROLLING THE TRAINING PROBLEM E.R. PERRY, THE SINGER
COMPANY, U.S.A *.-. 73 HUMAN FACTORS IN FLIGHT SIMULATOR DEVELOPMENT
E.A. STARK, THE SINGER COMPANY, U.S.A 76 USING DISCRETE SIMULATION TO
TEACH ABOUT OPERATING SYSTEMS CM. SHUB, UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT, U.S.A 79
FRONTIERS OF MODELING FOR SIMULATORS A.B. CLYMER, AUTODYNAMICS, INC.,
U.S.A * . * . 82 AN ADVANCED SIMULATOR REACTOR CORE SYSTEM MODEL T-C.
CHAN, WESTINGHOUSE ELECTRIC CORPORATION, U.S.A * . * . 84 SURVEY OF
COMPUTER CODES FOR REACTOR TRANSIENT SIMULATION ANALYSIS P. G. BAILEY,
ELECTRIC POWER RESEARCH INSTITUTE, U.S.A 87 CHALLENGES TO SIMULATION
SOFTWARE - AN OVERVIEW W.D. WADE, WADE ENGINEERING, P.C., U.S.A * . * .
90 APPLICATION SOFTWARE DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS FOR A CANDU NUCLEAR
GENERATING STATION TRAINING SIMULATOR . S. G. CHOW, K. L. POON AND R. M.
DAVIS, ONTARIO HYDRO, CANADA * . * . 92 REAL-TIME SIMULATION OF A
CONDENSATE/FEEDWATER FLOW SYSTEM L.E. BOWER, P.K. LU AND K.C. CHEUNG,
GOULD INC., U.S.A . . . 95 VALIDATION OF MODELS FOR NUCLEAR TRAINING
SIMULATORS T.W. KERLIN, UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE AND ANALYSIS AND
MEASUREMENT SERVICES, U.S.A. 98 SIMULATORS FOR EDUCATION AND TRAINING
R.M. MASLO, ELECTRONIC ASSOCIATES, INC., U.S.A 101 ONTARIO HYDRO'S
TRAINING SIMULATOR PROGRAM FOR NUCLEAR GENERATING STATIONS G.T.
BEREZNAI, ONTARIO HYDRO, CANADA 103 MITAGS - THE VANTAGE POINT OF
SIMULATION TRAINING M.H. CARPENTER, U.S.A 106 SIMULATION INITIALIZATION
BIAS: THE CURRENT STATE L.W. SCHRUBEN, CORNELL UNIVERSITY, U.S.A 109
MODEL VALIDATION: THE CURRENT STATE R.G. SARGENT, SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY,
U.S.A 112 SIMULATION LANGUAGES A.A.B. PRITSKER, PRITSKER & ASSOCIATES,
INC., U.S.A 115 IV ADVANCED CONCEPTS AND CAPABILITIES FOR THE ANALYSIS
OF SIMULATION OUTPUT C.R. STANDRIDGE AND A.A.B. PRITSKER, PRITSKER AND
ASSOCIATES INC., U.S.A 116 USING MICROCOMPUTERS IN SIMULATION STUDIES
G.B. WHITEHOUSE, D.G. LINTON, C.A. DAVIS AND J.C. MACK, UNIVERSITY OF
CENTRAL FLORIDA, U.S.A 119 CAPACITY PLANNING: A CASE STUDY USING
SIMULATION K.J. ENGEMANN, M.- GILMARTIN AND B. MZCLSOD, IONA COLLEGE,
U.S.A 122 THE IMPACT OF COMPUTER BASED HUMAN COMMUNICATION AND DECISION
SUPPORT SYSTEMS ON SIMULATION AND MODELING ACCEPTANCE J.M. SCHER, NEW
JERSEY INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY, U.S.A 125 DETERMINING AN OPTIMAL DRUGS
INVENTORY POLICY: A SIMULATION APPROACH N. FINGER, A. MEHREZ, BEN GURION
UNIVERSITY, ISRAEL, N. FRAIMAN, INTERNATIONAL PAPER COMPANY, U.S.A. AND
M. MOHL, SETON BALL UNIVERSITY, U.S.A 129 STATISTICAL ISSUES IN
SIMULATION P.P. TUNER, UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, U.S.A 132 MODERN AND EASY
GENERATION OF RANDOM NUMBERS/TESTING.OF RANDOM NUMBER GENERATORS WITH
TESTRAND E.J. DUDEWICZ AND T.G. BAILEY, THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY, U.S.A
133 A SIMULATION STUDY OF TRANSFORMATIONS IN DISCRIMINANT ANALYSIS J.H.
SCHUENEMEYER AND G.V. JOGLEKAR, UNIVERSITY OF DELEWARE, U.S.A. 136 A
NOTE ON RANDOM NUMBER GENERATION UNDER TIME AND SPACE CONSTRAINTS L.A.
RAMSHAW AND P.O. AMER, UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, U.S.A 139 NUMERICAL
SYNTHESIS OF DYNAMIC EQUATIONS OF MOTION AND THEIR APPLICATION TO A
CRAWLER TRACTOR Z. GORAJ, INSTITUTE OF AIRCRAFT ENGINEERING AND APPLIED
MECHANICS POLYTECHNIC OF WARSAW, POLAND, AND E. IGRAS, RESEARCH AND
DEVELOPMENT CENTER AT INDUSTRIAL COMBINE "HUTA STALOOA WOLA", POLAND . .
. 142 MODERN TRAINING OF PROCESS OPERATORS THE AUTODYNAMICS MODEL 1501
PROCESS SIMULATOR W.A. HALLEMEYER, AUTODYNAMICS, INC., U.S.A 145
SIMULATION IN THE DESIGN OF ROBOT CONTROLS J.R. HEWIT AND N. TAN,
UNIVERSITY OF NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE, U.K 148 COMPUTER AID DESIGN AND
OPTIMIZATION OF A SMALL TRACK RETARDER S. JANJANIN, S. MIHID AND R.
JOVANOVID, YUGOSLAVIA 151 ANALYSIS AND DESIGN OF LEAF-SPRING FLEXIBLE
JOINTS FOR DRIVING GYROSCOPIC ROTORS J.L. SCIESZKO AND W.M. MANSOUR,
FEDERAL UNIVERSITY OF RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL 155 NUMERICAL AND
EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATIONS OF THE PULSE WAVE RESPONSE OF A NECKED ROD
M. ZINDELUK, FEDERAL UNIVERSITY OF RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL 157 SIMULATION
MODELING AS AN AID TO CASTING PLANT DESIGN FOR AN ALUMINUM SMELTER J.R.
GROSS, MILLIKIN UNIVERSITY, U.S.A., S.M. HARE, PRITSKER & ASSOCIATES,
INC., U.S.A. AND S. ROY, ALCAN INTERNATIONAL, LTD., U.S.A 160 A DISCRETE
SIMULATION OF THE COKE PLANT AT ALGOMA STEEL R.J. MCFARLANE, THE ALGOMA
STEEL CORPORATION, LIMITED, CANADA 162 SOME THOUGHTS ON DISCRETE
SIMULATION A. JDVOR, HUNGARIAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, HUNGARY 165 DIGITAL
SIMULATION OF CRUCIFORM VEHICLES WITH GYROSCOPIC STABILIZATION E.A.
AUGUSTO AND A. SATO, AEROSPACE TECHNICAL CENTER IAE/CTA, BRAZIL 166 ON
SIMULATING NEWSPAPER DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS L.J. BAIN AND D.S. JOSHI,
ROCKWELL INTERNATIONAL, U.S.A 169 COMPUTER SIMULATION OF DECENTRALIZED
ECONOMIC SYSTEM WITH DIFFERENT CRITERIA G. FRIDMAN, UNIVERSITY OF HAIFA,
ISRAEL 172 MODELLING CONSTRUCTS OF SIMSCRIPT II.5 B.C. RUSSELL, CACI,
U.S.A 175 DUAL NATURE OF EVENTS IN DISCRETE SIMULATION A. JDVOR,
HUNGARIAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, HUNGARY 177 AN OVERVIEW OF THE BIOMEDICAL
MATHEMATICAL MODELING SYMPOSIUM J. EISENFELD, THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT
ARLINGTON, U.S.A. AND V.C. RIDEOUT, UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON,
U.S.A 180 CONSTRUCTION AND EFFECTIVE USE OF COMPLEX BIOLOGICAL MODELS D.
GARFINKEL, UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, U.S.A 181 SIMILARITY PRINCIPLES
AND THEIR ROLE IN BIOMEDICAL MODELLING R.ROSEN, DALHOUSIE UNIVERSITY,
CANADA 184 THE INVERSE PROBLEM FOR COMPARTMENTAL SYSTEMS J.A. JACQUEZ,
THE UNIVERISTY OF MICHIGAN, U.S.A 136 A SKELETON OF PHYSICAL IDEAS FOR
THE DYNAMICS OF COMPLEX SYSTEMS F.E. YATES AND A.S. IBERALL, CRUMP
INSTITUTE FOR MEDICAL ENGINEERING, U.S.A 190 NETWORK THERMODYNAMIC
SIMULATION OF BIOLOGICAL SYSTEMS: AN OVERVIEW D.C. MIKULECKY, VIRGINIA
COMMONWEALTH UNIVERSITY, U.S.A 194 PERCEPTION AS AN ACTIVE PROCESS K.H.
NORWICH, UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO, CANADA 197 OPTIMAL MULTICOMPARTMENTAL
SAMPLING DESIGNSFOR PARAMETER ESTIMATION - PRACTICAL ASPECTS OF THE
IDENTIFICATION PROBLEM E.M. LANDAW, UCLA SCHOOL OF MEDICINE, U.S.A. . .
200 EXPERIENCE WITH SEQUENTIAL OPTIMAL SAMPLING SCHEDULE DESIGNS FOR
PHARMACOKINETIC AND PHYSIOLOGIC EXPERIMENTS J.J. DISTEFANO, III,
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, U.S.A 20 3 ON THE STATISTICAL MOMENTS
TRANSFORMATION IN PHARMACOKINETIC MODELS: A COMPARISON OF THE RATE
PARAMETER AND THE MEAN RESIDENCE TIME ESTIMATES J.H. MATIS, D.R. OLSON,
TEXAS ASM UNIVERSITY, U.S.A. AND K.B. GERALD, UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
U.S.A. 206 STOCHASTIC VERSUS DETERMINISTIC G.S. LADDE, UNIVERSITY OF
TEXAS AT ARLINGTON, U.S.A. . : . . 209 IS DETERMINISTIC IDENTIFLABILITY
A FRAUD? G.A. BEKEY AND F.Y. HADAEGH, UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA,
U.S.A 211 MODELLING METABOLIC AND ENDOCRINE SYSTEMS: AN INTEGRATED
APPRAOCH TO MODEL FORMULATION, IDENTIFICATION AND VALIDATION C. COBELLI,
UNIVERSITY DI PADOVA, ITALY, E.R. CARSON, THE CITY UNIVERSITY, LONDON,
AND ROYAL FREE HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF MEDICINE, LONDON AND L. FINKELSTEIN,
THE CITY UNIVERSITY, LONDON 214 AN APPROACH TO THE PROBLEM OF LINEAR
SYSTEM IDENTIFIABILITY THROUGH THE INVESTIGATION OF STRUCTURAL
PROPERTIES OF THE CONNECTION, INJECTION AND OBSERVATION MATRICES J.
DELFORGE, CEN/SACLAY, FRANCE 217 IDENTIFIABILITY TESTING FOR LINEAR AND
NONLINEAR STATE SPACE MODELS E. WALTER, CNRS/ESE, FRANCE 220 PARAMETER
IDENTIFIABILITY FOR PARTIAL DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS C.C. TRAVIS, OAK
RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY, U.S.A. AND L.W. WHITE, UNIVERSITY OF
OKLAHOMA, U.S.A. . . 223 VI STRUCTURAL IDENTIFIABILITY CRITERIA FOR
LARGE LINEAR AND NONLINEAR COMPARTMENTAL SYSTEMS J. EISENFE.14, THE
UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT ARLINGTON, U.S.A 225 ROLE OF IDENTIFIABILITY IN
VALIDATION OF COMPARTMENTAL MODELS R.F. BROWN, UNIVERSITY OF NEW SCMTH
WALES, AUSTRALIA, 229 IDENTIFICATION OF TIME SERIES AND COMPARTMENTAL
MODELS D.H. ANDERSON AND E.C. GARTLAND, JR., SOUTHERN METHODIST
UNIVERSITY, U.S.A 232 PARAMETER ESTIMATION ON A MODEL OF THE SYSTEMIC
ARTERIAL SYSTEM J.W. CLARK, RICE UNIVERSITY, U.S-A. AND R.A. PAULSEN,
SANDIA LABORATORIES, U.S.A 235 MODEL STUDIES OF BLOOD PRESSURE AND FLOW
AND OF OXYGEN TRANSPORT IN INFANTS WITH TRANSPOSITION OF THE GREAT
ARTERIES E.H. BLACKSTONE, THE UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA IN BIRMINGHAM,
U.S.A. AND V.C. RIDEOUT, UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON, U.S.A. 236
SADDLE POINT BEHAVIOUR FOR A REACTION - DIFFUSION SYSTEM. APPLICATION TO
A CLASS OF EPIDEMIC MODELS V. CAPASSO AND L. MADDALENA, ISTITUTO DI
ANALISI MATEMATICA, ITALY 237 FEATURE EXTRACTION AND AUTO-REGRESSIVE
SIMULATION OF HEPATIC DISORDERED STATES BASED ON TIME-SERIESED CLINICAL
LABORATORY DATA H. MORI, K. OHTAKE, S. SAWAI, T. MINEYAMA, K. RYU, A.
TAKEKAWA, S. KITAMURA, KOBE UNIVERSITY, JAPAN AND T. ONO, OSAKA
PREFECTNZ AL UNIVERSITY, JAPAN 241 PROPOSAL OF OPTIMUM DRUG DOSAGE BY
MEANS OF SIMULATION PHARMACOKINETICS MODELS J. POTUCEK, V. BRODAN AND T.
SECHSER, INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL MEDICINE AND ORGANIZATION OF HEALTH
SERVICES AND INSTITUTE FOR CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE,
CZECHOSLOVAKIA 244 ANALYSIS OF THE COMPLIANCE DESCRIPTOR FOR LEFT
VENTRICULAR PUMPING W.A. RYAN, JR., F.P. PELUSO, W.S. FOPHAM, S.D.
ALLEN, J. MELBIN AND A. NOORDERGRAFF, UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA AND
UNIVERSITY OF UTAH, U.S.A 247 MODELS AND CLINICAL APPLICATION J.E.W.
BENEKENAND T. STAPPER, EINDHOVEN UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY, THE
NETHERLANDS 252 TREND DETECTION IN PHYSIOLOGICAL SIGNALS J.E.W. BENEKEN,
EINDHOVEN UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY, THE NETHERLANDS 253 SIMULATION AND
PREDICTION OF CLINICAL STATES OF LEUKEMIA BY THE AUTO-REGRESSION MODEL
H. MORI, S. KITAMURA, T. NAGAOKA, A. TAKEKAWA AND FL. TAMAGTIAHI, KOBE
UNIVERSITY, JAPAN 254 SOFTWARE FOR SOLVING IDENTIFICATION AND
IDENTIFIABILITY PROBLEMS, E.G. IN COMPARTMENTAL SYSTEMS H. POHJANPALO
ARD B. WAHLSTROM, TECHNICAL RESEARCH CENTRE OF FINLAND, FINLAND 257
PROGNOSTIC MODEL OF STATE OF MARINE ECOSYSTEMS APPLIED TO FISHERY A.S.
VASIL'EV, G.N. DEINEGA AND F-T. FEDOTOV, MARINE HYDROPHYSICAL INSTITUTE
ACADEMY OF SCIENCES UK.SSR, USSR 260 THEORETICAL BACKGROUND FOR THE
SIMULATION OF MARINE SYSTEM DYNAMICS V.I. BELYAEV, MARINE HYDROPHYSICAL
INSTITUTE ACADEMY OF SCIENCES UK.SSR, USSR . 263 GRID GENERATION FOR
ENVIRONMENTAL FLOWS W.C. THACKER, ATLANTIC OOEONOGXAPHIA AND
METEOROLOGICAL LABORATORIES, U.S.A 266 MODELING THERMAL PLUMES IN TIDAL
RIVERS J. HAUSER, D. EPPEL, M. LOBMEYF, A. FLEHLSEN AND A. MULLER, GKSS
RESEARCH CENTER, 'CERMANY AND F. TANZER, UN'IVERSITAT GIESSEN, GERMANY
270 MATHEMATICAL MODELING OF COOLING TOWER PLUMES R. CARHART, UNIVERSITY
OF ILLINOIS CHICAGO CIRCLE, U.S.A. AND A. POLICASTRO, ARGONR.E NATIONAL
LABORATORY, U.S.A 274 VII GEOHYDROCHEMICAL MODELS: USES IN THE ELECTRIC
UTILITY INDUSTRY I.P. MURARKA, ELECTRIC POWER RESEARCH INSTITUTE, U.S.A
277 _ TRANSPORT OF WATER AND SOLUTES IN SOILS L. BOERSMA, M.L. LINGS,
AND E.L. MCCOY, OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY, U.S.A 280 THE USE OF ASYMPTOTIC
EXPANSIONS TO DETERMINE THE SHORT- AND-LONG TERM LEACHING BEHAVIORS OF
NUCLEAR WASTE FORMS C. PESCATORE AND A.J. MAAHIELS, UNIVERSITY OF
ILLINOIS, U.S.A 283 THERMOMECHANICAL PROBLEMS IN NUCLEAR WASTE USING THE
EXPLICIT FINITE-DIFFERENCE METHOD R. HOFMANN, SCIENCE APPLICATIONS,
INC., U.S.A 286 THE DEVELOPMENT AND APPLICATION OF A GEOLOGIC SIMULATION
MODEL M.G. FOLEY, PACIFIC NORTHWEST LABORATORY, U.S.A 288 APPLICATION OF
SYSTEMS VARIABILITY ANALYSIS TO ASSESS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS IN THE
CANADIAN NUCLEAR FUEL WASTE MANAGEMENT PROGRAM T.H. ANDRES, ATOMIC
ENERGY OF CANADA LIMITED, CANADA 291 A THREE DIMENSIONAL HYBRID FINITE
ELEMENT-FINITE DIFFERENCE SCHEME FOR GROUNDWATER SIMULATION D.K. BABU
AND G.F. FINDER, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY, U.S.A., O.K. SUNADA, COLORADO
STATE UNIVERSITY, U.S.A 292 THE PRINCIPAL DIRECTION TECHNIQUE FOR
SOLUTION OF THE ADVECTION-DISPERSON EQUATION E.O. FRIND, UNIVERSITY OF
WATERLOO, CANADA AND G.F. FINDER, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY, U.S.A 295
NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF SUBSURFACE ENERGY STORAGE PROBLEMS P.S.
HUYAKORN, D.E. DOUGHERTY AND C.R. FAUST, GEOTRANS, INC., U.S.A 296
COLLOCATION SIMULATOR FOR A SYSTEM OF COUPLED TRANSPORT OPERATORS V. V.
NGUYEN, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY, U.S.A 300 |
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spelling | World Congress on System Simulation and Scientific Computation 10 1982 Montréal Verfasser (DE-588)815883-6 aut Proceedings Aug. 8-13, 1982, Montreal, Canada 2 Analog/hybrid computation, simulators, discrete systems, modeling and simulation, modeling and simulation in bio and environmental sciences 10. IMACS World Congress on System Simulation and Scientific Computation 1982 Montreal VIII, 300 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Vichnevetsky, Robert Sonstige oth (DE-604)BV021863365 10,2 GBV Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=015320905&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Proceedings Aug. 8-13, 1982, Montreal, Canada |
title | Proceedings Aug. 8-13, 1982, Montreal, Canada |
title_auth | Proceedings Aug. 8-13, 1982, Montreal, Canada |
title_exact_search | Proceedings Aug. 8-13, 1982, Montreal, Canada |
title_exact_search_txtP | Proceedings Aug. 8-13, 1982, Montreal, Canada |
title_full | Proceedings Aug. 8-13, 1982, Montreal, Canada 2 Analog/hybrid computation, simulators, discrete systems, modeling and simulation, modeling and simulation in bio and environmental sciences 10. IMACS World Congress on System Simulation and Scientific Computation |
title_fullStr | Proceedings Aug. 8-13, 1982, Montreal, Canada 2 Analog/hybrid computation, simulators, discrete systems, modeling and simulation, modeling and simulation in bio and environmental sciences 10. IMACS World Congress on System Simulation and Scientific Computation |
title_full_unstemmed | Proceedings Aug. 8-13, 1982, Montreal, Canada 2 Analog/hybrid computation, simulators, discrete systems, modeling and simulation, modeling and simulation in bio and environmental sciences 10. IMACS World Congress on System Simulation and Scientific Computation |
title_short | Proceedings |
title_sort | proceedings aug 8 13 1982 montreal canada analog hybrid computation simulators discrete systems modeling and simulation modeling and simulation in bio and environmental sciences |
title_sub | Aug. 8-13, 1982, Montreal, Canada |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=015320905&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV021863365 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT worldcongressonsystemsimulationandscientificcomputationmontreal proceedingsaug8131982montrealcanada2 AT vichnevetskyrobert proceedingsaug8131982montrealcanada2 |