Difference between revisions of "Geographical Dependency"
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− | Infrastructures are geographically dependent if a local environmental event can create state changes in all of them. (after: <ref name="Rinaldi2001"> Rinaldi, S., J. Peerenboom, and T. Kelly (2001). Identifying, understanding and analysing critical infrastructure interdependencies. IEEE Control Systems Magazine, pp. 11–25.</ref>.) E.g. if telecommunication and electrical distribution lines use the same bridge, the destruction of the bridge (local environmental event) has effects on the state of both infrastructures. | + | Infrastructures are geographically dependent if a local environmental event can create state changes in all of them. (after: <ref name="Rinaldi2001"> Rinaldi, S., J. Peerenboom, and T. Kelly (2001). Identifying, understanding and analysing critical infrastructure interdependencies. IEEE Control Systems Magazine, pp. 11–25.</ref>.) E.g. if telecommunication and electrical [[distribution]] lines use the same bridge, the destruction of the bridge (local environmental event) has effects on the state of both infrastructures. |
==Literature== | ==Literature== |
Revision as of 17:20, 4 June 2014
Infrastructures are geographically dependent if a local environmental event can create state changes in all of them. (after: [1].) E.g. if telecommunication and electrical distribution lines use the same bridge, the destruction of the bridge (local environmental event) has effects on the state of both infrastructures.
Literature
- ↑ Rinaldi, S., J. Peerenboom, and T. Kelly (2001). Identifying, understanding and analysing critical infrastructure interdependencies. IEEE Control Systems Magazine, pp. 11–25.