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Tuesday March 16th 2010
SearchAgner Krarup Erlang | ||
Agner Krarup Erlang (January 1, 1878–February 3, 1929) was a Danish mathematician, statistician, and engineer who invented the fields of traffic engineering and queueing theory. BiographyErlang was born at Lonborg (Lønborg), near Tarm, in For the next two years he taught alongside his father. With a distant relative providing free board and lodgings, he prepared for and sat the He was a member of the Danish Mathematicians' Association and through this met amateur mathematician Johan Jensen, the Chief Engineer of the Copenhagen Telephone Company, an offshoot of the International Bell Telephone Company. Erlang subsequently obtained employment with the company in 1908. He worked for the Copenhagen Telephone Company for almost 20 years, until his death in It was while working for the Copenhagen Telephone Company that Erlang was presented with the classic problem of determining how many circuits were needed to provide an acceptable telephone service. However, his thinking went further in that he also realised that mathematics could be applied to assess how many operators were needed to handle a given volume of telephone calls. At that time most telephone exchanges used human operators and cord boards to switch telephone calls by means of jack plugs. Out of necessity, Erlang was a hands-on researcher. He would conduct his own measurements and was prepared to climb into street manholes to do so. Erlang was also an expert in both the history and calculation of the numerical tables of mathematical functions, particularly logarithms. He devised new calculation methods for certain forms of mathematical tables. He developed his theory concerning telephone traffic over several years. His significant publications include...* In 1909 - "The Theory of Probabilities and Telephone Conversations" - which proves that the Poisson distribution applies to random telephone traffic. * In 1917 - "Solution of some Problems in the Theory of Probabilities of Significance in Automatic Telephone Exchanges" - which contains his classic formulae for loss and waiting time. These and other notable papers were translated into English, French and German. His papers were prepared in a very brief style and can be difficult to understand without a background in the field. One researcher from Bell Telephone Laboratories is said to have learned Danish to study Erlang's papers. The British Post Office accepted his formula as the basis for calculating circuit facilities. He was an associate of the British Institution of Electrical Engineers. A unit of measurement, statistical distribution and programming language listed below have all been named in his honour. Copyright 2008 - France BtoB from Wikipédia
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