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Physical Sciences and Mathematics Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

1995

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Syracuse University

HI-MASS

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Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

A Simulation Model Of A Surveillance Radar Data Processing System Using Hi-Mass, Steven D. Farr, Alex F. Sisti, Douglas G. Fritz, Robert G. Sargent Jan 1995

A Simulation Model Of A Surveillance Radar Data Processing System Using Hi-Mass, Steven D. Farr, Alex F. Sisti, Douglas G. Fritz, Robert G. Sargent

Electrical Engineering and Computer Science - All Scholarship

This paper discusses the model specification, construction of the executable model, model execution, and the simulation results of a simulation model of a surveillance radar data processing system that was developed using the Hierarchical Modeling and Simulation System (HI-MASS). HI-MASS is an object oriented C++ based system that supports model specification (modeling) using the Hierarchical Control Flow Graph Model paradigm and executes simulation models using the sequential synchronous simulation execution algorithm. Models specified in this model paradigm use two complementary hierarchical specification structures, one to specify the model components and their interconnections and the other to specify the behaviors of …


Verification And Validation Of Simulation Models, Douglas G. Fritz, Robert G. Sargent, Thorsten Daum Jan 1995

Verification And Validation Of Simulation Models, Douglas G. Fritz, Robert G. Sargent, Thorsten Daum

Electrical Engineering and Computer Science - All Scholarship

The Hierarchical Modeling and Simulation System (HI-MASS) is a prototype modeling and simulation system that supports modeling based on the Hierarchical Control Flow Graph Model paradigm and simulation execution using a sequential synchronous simulation algorithm. The prototype is an object oriented C++ based system designed for a Unix environment and implemented using freely available software tools. Models are specified using two complementary hierarchical model specification structures, one to specify the components which comprise a model and how those components are interconnected, and the other to specify the behaviors of the individual components. A graphical user interface provides for component and …