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Multiple Communication in Multihop Radio Networks

115

Citations

13

References

1993

Year

Abstract

Two tasks of communication in a multihop synchronous radio network are considered: Point-to-point communication and broadcast (sending a message to all nodes of a network). Efficient protocols for both problems are presented. Even though the protocols are probabilistic, it is shown how to acknowledge messages deterministically. Let n, D, and $\Delta $ be the number of nodes, the diameter and the maximum degree of our network, respectively. Both protocols require a setup phase in which a BFS tree is constructed. This phase takes $O((n + D\log n)\log \Delta )$ time. After the setup, k point-to-point transmissions require $O((k + D)\log \Delta )$ time on the average. Therefore the network allows a new transmission every $O(\log \Delta )$ time slots. Also, k broadcasts require an average of $O((k + D)\log \Delta \log n)$ time. Hence the average throughput of the network is a broadcast every $O(\log \Delta \log n)$ time slots. Both protocols pipeline the messages along the BFS tree. They are always successful on the graph spanned by the BFS tree. Their probabilistic behavior refers only to the running time. Using the above protocols the ranking problem is solved in $O(n\log n\log \Delta )$ time. The performance analysis of both protocols constitutes a new application of queueing theory.

References

YearCitations

1976

716

1956

701

1984

677

1985

615

1992

433

1991

360

1988

267

1979

212

1991

202

1986

193

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