In queueing theory, a discipline within the mathematical theory of probability, an M/D/c queue represents the queue length in a system having c servers, where arrivals are determined by a Poisson process and job service times are fixed (deterministic). The model name is written in Kendall's notation. [1] Agner Krarup Erlang first published on this model in 1909, starting the subject of queueing theory. [2] [3] The model is an extension of the M/D/1 queue which has only a single server.
An M/D/c queue is a stochastic process whose state space is the set {0,1,2,3,...} where the value corresponds to the number of customers in the system, including any currently in service.
Erlang showed that when ρ = (λ D)/c < 1, the waiting time distribution has distribution F(y) given by [4]
Crommelin showed that, writing Pn for the stationary probability of a system with n or fewer customers, [5]