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Development of network computational models for the study of nonlinear wave processes on graphs
Computer Research and Modeling, 2019, v. 11, no. 5, pp. 777-814In various applications arise problems modeled by nonlinear partial differential equations on graphs (networks, trees). In order to study such problems and various extreme situations arose in the problems of designing and optimizing networks developed the computational model based on solving the corresponding boundary problems for partial differential equations of hyperbolic type on graphs (networks, trees). As applications, three different problems were chosen solved in the framework of the general approach of network computational models. The first was modeling of traffic flow. In solving this problem, a macroscopic approach was used in which the transport flow is described by a nonlinear system of second-order hyperbolic equations. The results of numerical simulations showed that the model developed as part of the proposed approach well reproduces the real situation various sections of the Moscow transport network on significant time intervals and can also be used to select the most optimal traffic management strategy in the city. The second was modeling of data flows in computer networks. In this problem data flows of various connections in packet data network were simulated as some continuous medium flows. Conceptual and mathematical network models are proposed. The numerical simulation was carried out in comparison with the NS-2 network simulation system. The results showed that in comparison with the NS-2 packet model the developed streaming model demonstrates significant savings in computing resources while ensuring a good level of similarity and allows us to simulate the behavior of complex globally distributed IP networks. The third was simulation of the distribution of gas impurities in ventilation networks. It was developed the computational mathematical model for the propagation of finely dispersed or gas impurities in ventilation networks using the gas dynamics equations by numerical linking of regions of different sizes. The calculations shown that the model with good accuracy allows to determine the distribution of gas-dynamic parameters in the pipeline network and solve the problems of dynamic ventilation management.
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Mathematical models and methods for organizing calculations in SMP systems
Computer Research and Modeling, 2025, v. 17, no. 3, pp. 423-436The paper proposes and investigates a mathematical model of a distributed computing system of parallel interacting processes competing for the use of a limited number of copies of a structured software resource. In cases of unlimited and limited parallelism by the number of processors of a multiprocessor system, the problems of determining operational and exact values of the execution time of heterogeneous and identically distributed competing processes in a synchronous mode are solved, which ensures a linear order of execution of blocks of a structured software resource within each of the processes without delays. The obtained results can be used in a comparative analysis of mathematical relationships for calculating the implementation time of a set of parallel distributed interacting competing processes, a mathematical study of the efficiency and optimality of the organization of distributed computing, solving problems of constructing an optimal layout of blocks of an identically distributed system, finding the optimal number of processors that provide the directive execution time of given volumes of computations. The proposed models and methods open up new prospects for solving problems of optimal distribution of limited computing resources, synchronization of a set of interacting competing processes, minimization of system costs when executing parallel distributed processes.
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Numerical simulation of cooling tanks for vapor desublimation processes
Computer Research and Modeling, 2011, v. 3, no. 4, pp. 383-388Views (last year): 2. Citations: 6 (RSCI).The paper presents a mathematical model to be used for design of cooling tanks for vapor desublimation. Results of calculations for the process of cooling of two tanks in a block of four are presented. Chart of the cooling air flow in the piping network is presented.
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Quantum-inspired episode selection for Monte Carlo reinforcement learning via QUBO optimization
Computer Research and Modeling, 2026, v. 18, no. 2, pp. 273-288Monte Carlo (MC) reinforcement learning suffers from high sample complexity, especially in environments with sparse rewards, large state spaces, and strongly correlated trajectories that reduce the statistical efficiency of return estimation. These well-known limitations often lead to slow convergence and unstable learning dynamics, particularly in settings where only a small fraction of collected trajectories is actually informative for policy improvement. A key challenge is therefore to identify a compact yet diverse subset of episodes that contributes most to the accuracy of value estimates while preserving sufficient exploration of the environment. To address this challenge, we reformulate episode selection as a Quadratic Unconstrained Binary Optimization (QUBO) problem and solve it using quantum-inspired sampling techniques. Our method, MC+ QUBO, inserts a combinatorial filtering step into the standard MC policy-evaluation pipeline: given a batch of trajectories, it selects a subset that maximizes cumulative reward and encourages broad state-space coverage. This selection procedure is expressed as a QUBO model, where linear terms favor high-return episodes, quadratic terms penalize redundancy between trajectories, and additional coupling terms can be used to enforce coverage-related constraints or promote structural diversity. Within this framework, we investigate two black-box QUBO solvers: Simulated Quantum Annealing (SQA), which emulates tunneling-based exploration of the search landscape, and Simulated Bifurcation (SB), a dynamical-systems-based iterative optimization method. Both solvers demonstrate the ability to efficiently navigate the combinatorial structure of the trajectory-selection problem and to handle batch sizes that are otherwise computationally expensive for exhaustive or deterministic search. Experiments in a finite-horizon GridWorld environment show that MC+QUBO consistently outperforms vanilla MC in convergence speed, stability of return estimates, and final policy quality. These results highlight the promise of quantum-inspired optimization as a practical decision-making subroutine within reinforcement-learning algorithms, offering a scalable way to improve sample efficiency without modifying the underlying learning paradigm.
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Numerical simulation of air cooling the tank to desublimate components of the gas mixture
Computer Research and Modeling, 2016, v. 8, no. 3, pp. 521-529Views (last year): 3. Citations: 1 (RSCI).For the production of purified final product in chemical engineering used the process of desublimation. For this purpose, the tank is cooled by liquid nitrogen or cold air. The mixture of gases flows inside the tank and is cooled to the condensation or desublimation temperature some components of the gas mixture. The condensed components are deposited on the walls of the tank. The article presents a mathematical model to calculate the cooling air tanks for desublimation of vapours. A mathematical model based on equations of gas dynamics and describes the movement of cooled air in the duct and the heat exchanger with heat exchange and friction. The heat of the phase transition is taken into account in the boundary condition for the heat equation by setting the heat flux. Heat transfer in the walls of the pipe and in the tank wall is described by the nonstationary heat conduction equations. The solution of the system of equations is carried out numerically. The equations of gas dynamics are solved by the method of S. K. Godunov. The heat equation are solved by an implicit finite difference scheme. The article presents the results of calculations of the cooling of two successively installed tanks. The initial temperature of the tanks is equal to 298 K. Cold air flows through the tubing, through the heat exchanger of the first tank, then through conduit to the heat exchanger second tank. During the 20 minutes of tank cool down to operating temperature. The temperature of the walls of the tanks differs from the air temperature not more than 1 degree. The flow of cooling air allows to maintain constant temperature of the walls of the tank in the process of desublimation components from a gas mixture. The results of analytical evaluation of the time of cooling tank and temperature difference between the tank walls and air with the vapor desublimation. Analytical assessment is based on determining the time of heat relaxation temperature of the tank walls. The results of evaluations are satisfactorily coincide with the results of calculations by the present model. The proposed approach allows calculating the cooling tanks with a flow of cold air supplied via the pipeline system.
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Using RAG technology and large language models to search for documents and obtain information in corporate information systems
Computer Research and Modeling, 2025, v. 17, no. 5, pp. 871-888This paper investigates the effectiveness of Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) combined with various Large Language Models (LLMs) for document retrieval and information access in corporate information systems. We survey typical use-cases of LLMs in enterprise environments, outline the RAG architecture, and discuss the major challenges that arise when integrating LLMs into a RAG pipeline. A system architecture is proposed that couples a text-vector encoder with an LLM. The encoder builds a vector database that indexes a library of corporate documents. For every user query, relevant contextual fragments are retrieved from this library via the FAISS engine and appended to the prompt given to the LLM. The LLM then generates an answer grounded in the supplied context. The overall structure and workflow of the proposed RAG solution are described in detail. To justify the choice of the generative component, we benchmark a set of widely used LLMs — ChatGPT, GigaChat, YandexGPT, Llama, Mistral, Qwen, and others — when employed as the answer-generation module. Using an expert-annotated test set of queries, we evaluate the accuracy, completeness, linguistic quality, and conciseness of the responses. Model-specific characteristics and average response latencies are analysed; the study highlights the significant influence of available GPU memory on the throughput of local LLM deployments. An overall ranking of the models is derived from an aggregated quality metric. The results confirm that the proposed RAG architecture provides efficient document retrieval and information delivery in corporate environments. Future research directions include richer context augmentation techniques and a transition toward agent-based LLM architectures. The paper concludes with practical recommendations on selecting an optimal RAG–LLM configuration to ensure fast and precise access to enterprise knowledge assets.
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Physics-assisted cascade neural network model for predicting pressure losses of a three-phase mixture in a pipeline
Computer Research and Modeling, 2026, v. 18, no. 1, pp. 117-131The paper presents a cascade model of a physically supported neural network designed to predict pressure drop in three-phase flow (oil, gas, water) in a pipe section with various angles of inclination. To overcome the constraints of existing empirical correlations and computation-intensive numerical modeling methods, we propose an architecture that decomposes the problem into three sequential physically interpretable subtasks: regression prediction of the fluid hold-up coefficient, fluid flow regime classification, and pressure gradient evaluation. Each subtask is solved by a separate fully connected neural network, the output of which is passed to the next model in the cascade. Training and testing of the proposed architecture was performed on an extensive synthetic dataset (8 · 107 records) generated using a semi-empirical model. Verification is performed on independent experimental data. A comparative analysis with a single fully connected (non-cascade) neural network is made, and the sensitivity of the models is examined using Sobol and Borgonovo methods. The cascade model demonstrates superior accuracy and ensures high interpretability of results by providing intermediate physical parameters (fluid hold-up coefficient, flow regime). The developed model has low computational complexity, which allows it to be used in real-time systems and digital twins of hydraulic systems in the oil and gas industry.
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Principles of sustainable scientific software: lessons from developing a data processing program for small-angle neutron scattering
Computer Research and Modeling, 2026, v. 18, no. 2, pp. 335-358The SAS program is the primary data processing tool for the YuMO small-angle neutron scattering spectrometer. The paper presents a retrospective analysis of its two-decade evolution, from a Fortran prototype to a modern software system. The analysis focuses on the architectural decisions that have ensured the program’s long-term viability and its ability to adapt to instrument upgrades.
The core solution was a modular architecture that abstracts the detector system. This enabled the seamless integration of data from two scattering detectors and, later, from a position-sensitive detector. A strict processing pipeline and a unified internal data representation formed the basis for physically grounded algorithms, including weighted merging of spectra, resolution-aware smoothing, and built-in statistical quality control. The program’s interfaces—a command line for batch processing and a graphical user interface for interactive work—are built upon a single computational core, ensuring result consistency and flexibility in use.
Long-term operation has confirmed that the underlying architectural principles naturally align with the key characteristics of international software quality standards, particularly those critical for long-term sustainability. Therefore, the development and evolution of SAS demonstrates a universal set of architectural principles that can serve as a foundation for building sustainable scientific software in related fields of experimental physics.
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Enhancing DevSecOps with continuous security requirements analysis and testing
Computer Research and Modeling, 2024, v. 16, no. 7, pp. 1687-1702The fast-paced environment of DevSecOps requires integrating security at every stage of software development to ensure secure, compliant applications. Traditional methods of security testing, often performed late in the development cycle, are insufficient to address the unique challenges of continuous integration and continuous deployment (CI/CD) pipelines, particularly in complex, high-stakes sectors such as industrial automation. In this paper, we propose an approach that automates the analysis and testing of security requirements by embedding requirements verification into the CI/CD pipeline. Our method employs the ARQAN tool to map high-level security requirements to Security Technical Implementation Guides (STIGs) using semantic search, and RQCODE to formalize these requirements as code, providing testable and enforceable security guidelines.We implemented ARQAN and RQCODE within a CI/CD framework, integrating them with GitHub Actions for realtime security checks and automated compliance verification. Our approach supports established security standards like IEC 62443 and automates security assessment starting from the planning phase, enhancing the traceability and consistency of security practices throughout the pipeline. Evaluation of this approach in collaboration with an industrial automation company shows that it effectively covers critical security requirements, achieving automated compliance for 66.15% of STIG guidelines relevant to the Windows 10 platform. Feedback from industry practitioners further underscores its practicality, as 85% of security requirements mapped to concrete STIG recommendations, with 62% of these requirements having matching testable implementations in RQCODE. This evaluation highlights the approach’s potential to shift security validation earlier in the development process, contributing to a more resilient and secure DevSecOps lifecycle.
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International Interdisciplinary Conference "Mathematics. Computing. Education"




