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The Vehicle Routing Problem: Latest Advances and New Challenges

Inglese · Tascabile

Spedizione di solito entro 6 a 7 settimane

Descrizione

Ulteriori informazioni

Theoretical research and practical applications in the ?eld of vehicle routing started in 1959 with the truck dispatching problem posed by Dantzig and Ramser [1]: ?nd the ". . . optimum routing of a ?eet of gasoline delivery trucks between a bulk terminal and a large number of service stations supplied by the terminal. " Using a method based on a linear programming formulation, their hand calculations produced a near-optimal solution with four routes to aproblemwithtwelve service stations. The authorsproclaimed:"Nopractical applications of the method have been made as yet. " In the nearly 50 years since the Dantzig and Ramser paper appeared, work in the ?eld has exploded dramatically. Today, a Google Scholar search of the words vehicle routing problem (VRP) yields more than 21,700 entries. The June 2006 issue of OR/MS Today provided a survey of 17 vendors of commercial routing software whose packages are currently capable of solving average-size problems with 1,000 stops, 50 routes, and two-hour hard-time windows in two to ten minutes [2]. In practice, vehicle routing may be the single biggest success story in operations research. For example, each day 103,500 drivers at UPS follow computer-generated routes. The drivers visit 7. 9 million customers and handle an average of 15. 6 million packages [3].

Riassunto

Theoretical research and practical applications in the ?eld of vehicle routing started in 1959 with the truck dispatching problem posed by Dantzig and Ramser [1]: ?nd the “. . . optimum routing of a ?eet of gasoline delivery trucks between a bulk terminal and a large number of service stations supplied by the terminal. ” Using a method based on a linear programming formulation, their hand calculations produced a near-optimal solution with four routes to aproblemwithtwelve service stations. The authorsproclaimed:“Nopractical applications of the method have been made as yet. ” In the nearly 50 years since the Dantzig and Ramser paper appeared, work in the ?eld has exploded dramatically. Today, a Google Scholar search of the words vehicle routing problem (VRP) yields more than 21,700 entries. The June 2006 issue of OR/MS Today provided a survey of 17 vendors of commercial routing software whose packages are currently capable of solving average-size problems with 1,000 stops, 50 routes, and two-hour hard-time windows in two to ten minutes [2]. In practice, vehicle routing may be the single biggest success story in operations research. For example, each day 103,500 drivers at UPS follow computer-generated routes. The drivers visit 7. 9 million customers and handle an average of 15. 6 million packages [3].

Testo aggiuntivo

From the reviews:
"The routing of vehicles with limited capacities for carrying goods or people is one of the major problems in transport logistics. … The book is clearly structured and mostly well written. I can recommend it to any reader who wants to deepen his or her understanding of vehicle routing problems. … the book is not only suited for experts in the area of vehicle routing but also for interested practitioners (especially the application-oriented chapters); and students." (T Hanne, Journal of the Operational Research Society, Vol. 60 (11), 2009)

Relazione

From the reviews:
"The routing of vehicles with limited capacities for carrying goods or people is one of the major problems in transport logistics. ... The book is clearly structured and mostly well written. I can recommend it to any reader who wants to deepen his or her understanding of vehicle routing problems. ... the book is not only suited for experts in the area of vehicle routing but also for interested practitioners (especially the application-oriented chapters); and students." (T Hanne, Journal of the Operational Research Society, Vol. 60 (11), 2009)

Dettagli sul prodotto

Con la collaborazione di Bruce Golden (Editore), S. Raghavan (Editore), Edward Wasil (Editore), Bruce L. Golden (Editore), Edward A. Wasil (Editore), Raghavan (Editore), Edward A Wasil (Editore), S Raghavan (Editore)
Editore Springer, Berlin
 
Contenuto Libro
Forma del prodotto Tascabile
Data pubblicazione 22.10.2010
Categoria Scienze sociali, diritto, economia > Economia > Tematiche generali, enciclopedie
 
EAN 9781441946034
ISBN 978-1-4419-4603-4
Numero di pagine 591
Illustrazioni X, 591 p.
Dimensioni (della confezione) 15.5 x 23.5 cm
Peso (della confezione) 896 g
 
Serie Operations Research/Computer Science Interfaces Series > 43
Operations Research/Computer Science Interfaces Series
Operations Research /Computer Science Interfaces Series > 43
Categorie Operations Research, C, Management und Managementtechniken, Ingenieurswesen, Maschinenbau allgemein, Business and Management, Management spezifischer Bereiche, Operations Management, Operations Research/Decision Theory, Operations Research and Decision Theory, Management & management techniques, Applications of Mathematics, Operations Research, Management Science, Mathematical and Computational Engineering, Management decision making, Management science, Engineering mathematics, Applied mathematics, Management of specific areas, Engineering economy, Engineering Economics, Organization, Logistics, Marketing, Engineering economics, Industrial Management, Operational research, Decision Making, Production management, Engineering: general, Mathematical and Computational Engineering Applications, Maths for engineers
 

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