Title :
Discrete event simulation class for engineering graduate students
Author :
Kress, Reid ; Cemerlic, Alma ; Kress, Jessica ; Varghese, Jacob
Author_Institution :
SimCenter, Univ. of Tennessee, Chattanooga, TN, USA
Abstract :
To graduate students accustomed to working with the numerical solution of partial differential equations using finite difference, finite elements, spectral methods, etc. where time generally progresses in evenly-spaced small intervals, switching paradigms to a discrete-event simulation environment is not only counterintuitive but is also difficult. The SimCenter at the University of Tennessee Chattanooga recently introduced a class in discrete event simulation with the goal of providing sufficient coverage of the topic to enable any of the SimCenter´s students completing the course to work effectively in a typical industry- or government-supported simulation modeling group. The course is structured around a diverse set of engineering problems rather than traditional industrial engineering-type simulations in order to present the material in a more palatable fashion for students who come primarily from other disciplines. This paper discusses the organization of the class and serves as a good outline for another professor attempting a similar introduction.
Keywords :
discrete event simulation; educational courses; engineering education; partial differential equations; University of Tennessee Chattanooga; discrete event simulation; engineering graduate students; finite difference; finite elements; industrial engineering-type simulation; partial differential equations; spectral methods; Analytical models; Discrete event simulation; Fasteners; Load modeling; Mathematical model; Software; Supply chains;
Conference_Titel :
Simulation Conference (WSC), Proceedings of the 2010 Winter
Conference_Location :
Baltimore, MD
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-9866-6
DOI :
10.1109/WSC.2010.5679149