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.
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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.
  
 
==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

  1. Rinaldi, S., J. Peerenboom, and T. Kelly (2001). Identifying, understanding and analysing critical infrastructure interdependencies. IEEE Control Systems Magazine, pp. 11–25.