The probability weighting of the different base and contingency states in MOST 
is described in Section 4.3 of the MOST User’s Manual. The transmat input is 
used to define these transition probabilities. If you have a specific question, 
please feel free to ask.

If I recall correctly, the numbers in that example correspond roughly to 3 
samples of a normal distribution (I don’t remember the details of how I 
generated them). In any case, the numbers themselves are not significant. They 
are just given as an example.

   Ray



> On Jan 25, 2018, at 9:14 AM, Alex David <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Dear Ray,
>  
> Thanks for the reply. Yes I did. Unfortunately, it was not very clear to me. 
> In addition, the values of T =  = [ 0.158655253931457; 0.682689492137086; 
> 0.158655253931457 ] did not make any sense to me.
>  
> Alex
>  
> Sent: Thursday, January 25, 2018 at 3:04 PM
> From: "Ray Zimmerman" <[email protected]>
> To: "MATPOWER discussion forum" <[email protected]>
> Subject: Re: Transmat details
> Did you check Section 5.1.2 in the MOST User’s Manual 
> <http://www.pserc.cornell.edu/matpower/docs/MOST-manual-1.0.pdf>?
>  
>    Ray
>  
> On Jan 17, 2018, at 8:20 PM, Alex David <[email protected] 
> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>  
> Dear Ray/others,
>  
> I have a question regarding "transmat" value used in "most ex7 suc.m". 
> Mainly, I'm confused with the values given in "ex_transmat(nt)":
>  
> T = [ 0.158655253931457; 0.682689492137086; 0.158655253931457 ]
>  
> Any pointers can be very helpful. Also, pardon for the naive question (if it 
> is).
>  
> Thanks,
> Alex

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